-v I' ge Eight. PERSPECTI VE S T~ I'! T~ L' TI E7 I' 'T' T '11 r~ C i- their ranks by the surrealists since 1929. Picasso's interest in the irrational began in native Negro art, turned next to cubism. the origin of which he shares a~rgumentatively with Braque, then, be- coming more free and unconventional than the cubists, developed into surreal- ism. The coming of Picasso to their ranks has brought much prestige to the surrealists and their movement. Picasso is now painting propaganda pictures for the Loyalist cause in Spain, as many other surrealists are also doing. Max Ernst has blue-grey hair, youth- ful eyes and is "rapid and instructive as a bird and pretends to hate birds." He paints with great masses of vibrating color, combining the child's approach with an adult's perfection. Marcel Du- champ. is a very precise, steady and accurate painter. He was first a futurist, then a cubist, then a surrealist. He seems always to be a jump ahead of the next movement. Abandoning painting for chess. at which he is an expert, Du- champ returned to art in 1934. Giorgio de Chirico objects to being included among the surrealists. However, his paintings bear a marked resemblance to those of the surrealists and they con- sider him one of them on these grounds. In his earlier days he was greatly en- couraged by the surrealists, but now he goes out of his way to avoid them. Pierre Roy is another artist whose works are similar to those of the surrealists, yet objects to being included by them in the movement. Other artists active in the movement are Rene Magritte, Yves Tanguy, Joan Miro, Hans Arp and Man Ray. Magritte is a Belgian painter, the leading artist of the Brussells Surrealist Group. Miro and Arp have a tendency to over-simpli- fy their work to the point of pure ab- straction, and have been attacked on that ground as not being true surreal- ists. Ray is an American, born in Phila- delphia, both a painter and a photog- rapher, better known as the latter. He now lives and works in Paris. His mar- velous understanding of the camera en- ables him to obtain very strange effects. IV Unclean night, night of flowers, night of death-rattles, spirituous night, lo! the hand thereof is but an abject kite that is caught in a mesh of strands, black strands and shameful! Oh, champaign land of white bones and red, where hast thou stowed thine impure trees, and thine aborescent candour, and thy fidelity that was a purse of sevried pearls., with flowers, with so-so in- scriptions, with pansignifications? And lo! it is thou the bandit, the bandit, ah! assassin, thou water bandit thou sheddest thy knives in, mine eyes, thou art then quite piti- less, radiant water, lustral water that I cherish! My imprecations, ever as a terrifyingly pretty girl- child brandishing her broom at you, shall pursue you at great length. Such is true surrealist prose, quite as unintelligible as a true surrealist paint- ing this particular sample being from Andre Breton's "Poisson Soluble." The surrealist' cannot be a stylist. He can- not ponder his works, write and re- write, correct and adjust to suit him- self. He must obey the directions of his- unconscious mind, and write as it directs, without consciously giving the matter any consideration. He must write fast, so as to keep up with his un- fettered mind; in fact, many surreal- ists dictate to secretaries, rather than go through- the- distracting process of writing down their thoughts. The poetry is as fantastic as the prose; as can easily been seen by. Paul. Eluard's Unique She-had in the tranquillity of her body A little snowball the color of an eye. She had on.her shoulders. A stains of silence, a stain, of. rose. Covercle of her aureole Her hands,.their supple-and singing arcs Broke the light She-sang for minutes.without sleeping. Foremost among the surrealist writ- ers is Andre Breton, leader and- co- sounder of. the movement. He is now 43 years old. He studied medicine which By HOWARD WHALEN led him to psychoanalysis. With head- quarters in the Cafe Cyrano, later in the Cafe de la Place Blanche, he led the first surrealist experiments with Desnos and Crenel as subjects. In these ex- periments, he tried to "isolate the germ of inspiration and examine its charac- teristics." He is the guiding hand of the group and keeps interest high by continually presenting new problems and projects. Breton's house is filled with rare and curious items of art and literature which he has gathered. He frequently dresses entirely in green, smokes a green pipe and drinks a green liquor. "He writes but little, for with the rest of the surrealists he has a fear of drowning his imagination in ink and feels that life is to be lived, not made a slave to words. This attitude, which is held by all the surrealists, while it does not make for mass production, does make for intensity, vitality and sin- cerity." The other two co-founders of surreal- ism are Paul Eluard and Philippe Sou- pault. Eluard has been spoken of as the heart and soul of surrealism, in con- trast to Breton as the head and sinews. His poetry is of a very plain and simple type, very melodious. Soupault was first associated with dada, then with surrealism. He writes poetry and prose. Other surrealist writers are Louis Aragon, Joseph Delteil, Guillaume Ap- pollinaire and Tristan Tzara. Though Appollinaire is not one of the surrealist group proper, since he died in 1918, he is credited with first applying the word surrealist in its present meaning. Tzara was the creator of dada, but later turned to surrealism. He is a Roumanian and became an active member of the Com- munist Party along with Aragon and Naville, while Breton and the rest are in sympathy with the Party but do not wish to be disciplined by subscribing thereto. Dali and Picabia are writers as well as painters, though are better known as painters. The latter's writing played an important part in the dada movement. V. The genesis of surrealism depends to a great extent on what the historian sees in the movement itself. The observer might find its origin in DaVinci, the philosopher in Bergson, the psychologist in Freud. It is more than likely that each of these played a part, to a greater or less extent. As a matter of fact, sur- realism has been blamed on everything from Plato to the New Deal. Plato probably never dreamed of sur- realism, but in "The Republic" he ar- gued that dreams may give a clue to some of the subtle and elusive appetites . and instincts of man. Thus Plato an- ticipated psychoanalysis, four centuries before Christ. DaVinci, too, anticipated the style of the surrealist painters, or so the sketches in his notebooks would seem to assert. Whether or not he had the surrealist point of view is doubtful, but' the London critics like to . think so. Other predecessors have been pointed out in the persons of Lautrea- mont, Rimbaud, the Marquis de Sade and Lewis Carroll. These might be predecessors, but it is certain that they were discovered to be so well after the movement was on its way, and that the movement did not grow out of their efforts. Perhaps the first thing which had a direct effect ultimately on surrealism was the coming of the machine age and its correspond- ing change in the art world. More di- rectly concerned with war time and post war movements in France was the reorganization of the French secondary school in 1902. Up to that time the em- phasis had been on the classic, and the reorganization eliminated them to a great extent in favor of. the sciences and living tongues. The significant part, of this is that the first generation taught in the new French secondary school was just coming into its own and taking its place in the world at the time of the war, and the effects of the-revolutionized training were beginning to make them- selves apparent. Then, in 1907, Bergson published his masterpiece, "L'Evolution creatrice" (Creative Evolution) and almost over- night became the most popular figure in the philosophical world. H-is theories received widespread attention, especial- ly in France. Then Freud came with his doctrine, and the result was wide- spread interest in the problems of in- dividual psychology, the psychoanaly- tical novel and the use of the dream- world as a mine for subject matter in painting and writing. Through this ran the "great era of the 'isms'.'' In the eighteen-nineties Cez- anne and Serriat led a movement known as neoimpressionism, and Gauguin spon- sored synthesism. In the nineteen hun- dreds came cubism, with Braque and- Picasso, which developed into suprema- tism, and constructivism. Therewasor- phism, neoplasticism, purism, futurism and symbolism. The Manifesto of Fu- turist Painting in 1910 urged artists to "Exalt every kind of originality, of bold- ness, of extreme violence," and to "Rebel against the tyranny of the words 'Har- mony' and 'Good Taste'." Then came the discovery of native Negro art, and expressionism was born. At the height of this period the World War came. It was during the war times that dada, surrealism's immediate forerunner, ap- peared, flourished and died. Since many dada writers and painters later turned to surrealism, and since dada reflected the primal effects of the chaotic war period, that movement deserves special attention here. In a Zurich cafe a group of men sat drinking and talking of a new idea of theirs. Among them were Tristan Tzara and Joan Miro. Tzara took up a diction- ary, opened it at random, and haphaz- ardly pointed with his pen knife. His knife hit upon the word'dada, so dada their idea was called. Translated, dada means hobby-horse. At the Movement Dada, Zeltureg 33, Zurich, they began publishing their first magazine in 1916. After the Armis- tice they moved to Paris, setting up headquarters at 32, Rue Charles Floquet, publishing there the "Bulletin Dada." 'Iherethey held performances at which four or five simultaneously read their own poetry with an accompaniment of clanging bells that drowned out their voices. Besides Tzara and Miro, dada attract- ed many others who were later :to be- come surrealists, including Arp, Ernst, Picabia, Duchamp, Man Ray and Grosz. Dada, like surrealism, was a state of mind rather than a school. It was a deliberate appeal to the irrational and absurd, in a profound and sincere pro- test against the ghastly irrationalities and absurdities of war. Outwardly, dada ridiculed the arts. That was evidently its main purpose, laughing at literature, music and painting. Some of the best examples of the dada methods of ridicule are those of Marcel Duchamp. In 1917 he sent to the Salon des Independants in New York a simple marble urinal with the title "The Foun- tain." In 1920 he sent to an exhibition a copy of the Mona Lisa with a mustache painted in, which he called LHOOQ. People began to sit up and take notice and wonder what this parasite of art was, and Picabia answered them, in one of the many dada manifestos, Manifesto of the Dada Movement: You haven't the faintest idea, I tak it, what we are up to! Ah, well, olt dear, we know less about it than you do.-So, congratulations, you're right after all! I'd love to sleep with the pope once more! That's greek to you? Sad, but the same here! Signed: Francis Picabia Dada was termed dead soon after the war, as early as 1920. It died because of its lack of system and coherent phiIoso- phy. The dadaists began to tire of their aimless clowning, seeking something a bit more serious and mature, Tzara, at the end, denied starting the dada move- ment. Later, he claimed to be the first to resign from it. Before. the coming of surrealism, an, like a voice from the grave, thed dais1 were heard once more. Anatole France died in October, 1924. On the day-of his funeral there was published in Paris A collection of briefs under the title "Un Cadavre" (A Corpse). Among the con- tributors were Louis Aragon, Paul Elu- ard, Joseph Delteil, Philippe Soupault and Drieu La Rochelle. Aragon's piece was entitled "Did You Ever Slap a Corpse?" The whole was a protest against Anatole France, his country's worship.for him, and the. acclaim given his school of writing. . Then,, on the first of December, 1924 "La Revolution Surrealiste" appeared in TO THE YOUTH of America the belief that we are born and cradled in struggle is a pulsing reality. To the post-depression generation-a generation which has known little else but decay, frustration and repression-human existence has been narrowed down to a matter of sheer survival. Understanding is essential in th efforts of all men to safeguard them- selves from the uncertainties of a pur- poseless and apparently malignant world. Consciousness of the real prob- lems, in any intellectual exercise, leads directly to a real solution. For young people, however, the attainment of knowledge and consciousness is especi- ally essential: they are in the unique position of being able to rescue the creative forces of our national life from the pseudo-intellectualism of the obscur- antists, the academic corpse-keepers and the tin-horn patriots. This essay is no private adventure. In it is reflected, it is hoped, the char- acteristic reactions of a large number of the young people who will constitute the next Younger Generation-the genera- tion of the Forties, Young America is on a voyage of discovery. All over the land new groups of well-equipped, schooled, and experienced young men and women are taking the lead in creat- ing a new consciousness of American life. They are engaged in the task of blasting through the many lies, plati- tudes and boasts that are passed off as the authentic American spirit or culture or aspirations or reality. They are reaching down into the hidden vitals of the "turmoil'd giant" in order to dis- cover the true qualities of - America: America, to these young adventurers, is more than a slice of a continent, it is more than a vast and bewildering jungle. America is also a concept to be created. The drama of American life is for us the struggle for the assertion of life itself. We go forth to seek and in seek- ing we create.- II It is undoubtedly true, as Lewis Mum- ford insists, that American culture was formed largely by two events: the break- down of the Medieval synthesis in the centuries that preceded America's settle- ment, and by the transfer to this soil of an abstract and fragmentary culture, given definite form by the Protestarits of the sixteenth century, the philoso- phers and scientists of the seventeenth, and the political thinkers of the eigh- teenth century. The important things for us, however, are the psychological and institutional differences engendered by indigenous American conditions. Psychologically peoples are what their respective environments have made them, and the American people are the strange amalgam that they are, dis- tinct from every other people, because their social heritage, although similar to the European, has been sufficiently different to be significant. Viewed in a long perspective certairh imposing figures and movements can be discerned as having enduringly in- fluenced- the development of American institutions and the American psychol- ogy: the pioneer and the westward-mov- ing frontier; the puritan and the sub- mergence of the creative human spirit; industrialism and the rape of a conti- nent; the growth of a megalopolitan city culture; individualism and its de- generation to exploitation and accumu- lation; equalitarianism and the persist- ent resurgence of the democratic idea. Our American heritage is one that springs directly from the land. There is no need to belabor this point, as the Southern Agrarians do, to realize its importance. There can be no doubt that the effect of the pioneer tradition upon the psychology of the American citizen By HOWARD WHALEN THFORTIES, .. by Elliot Mal is provided f writers have chaos which and uniform, social qualiti erance," a pr ism, and an which arises gruity betwee lief." Waldo : ago initiated tutions whic down to a : fifty years a puritanism a ated while w Twenty year dolphe Bour tuals into ac tions of the acquired fror Since the cans have pE outlook of y task is to wc vision of a" tainment of debt to the Twenties, ar that precede and it would we are still 1 tive world; tl are still with and standar and exploita the feeling pi paigns again American lif reflected dee maladjustme acter. They and sophisti disillusionme cynicism, bri of the Wor Lost Genera tic, but the r still filled b3 certainties, that they ar youth and li To young in the Thirt disillusioned far-off past of our diffic less to act. the palpable barism, the liberties, th form of exp the imminen and cynicism we cannot a mism, in th our souls dry one lives in doom and d world in wh and hunger becoming thi lesser tribu rationalizatic cynicisms, t and the ex small and un and we must as simple an It would be before the ' nature of tl assiduously "you can't ci there is som present state that is divir condition of experiment; for those w- continued ex racy in the r task of tran: change, of leadership a has been of far-reaching significance. The conditionsthat evoked the faith in America's manifest destiny to fashion a middle-class utopia have long ago been changed by the advance of the times. But the myth remains. The fact that economic and social classes, almost as rigid as those in Europe, are rapidly taking shape in this country is of little or no importance to the American who is still thinking in terms of the equalitar- ianism of the frontier-an equalitarian- ism, it is pertinent to note, that even in, the halcyon days of free land and ex- panding frontiers meant nothing more than the right of each individual to "get ahead" and make his "place in the sun." II' It would be easy for us to dismiss the' entire course of development of the American democratic tradition with the simple statement that it was merely a progression of romantic illusions exist- ing only in the wishful minds of sensi- tive men. We too, could cry aloud with the tender-minded reformers, who, dis- illusioned by the pragmatic acquiesence of the New Freedom liberals to Wilson's "humanitarian" war, and humiliated by the witch-hunting raids of the Depart- ment of Justice, either lapsed into a discreet and deadening silence or jumped agilely onto the Great American Band- wagon. We could, with easy justifica- tion, indulge in the same low-grade rationalizations of the F. Scott Fitz- geraldian youths who condemned man as an insatiably malicious demon-and tlien proceeded to drink themselves merrily and cynically to hell. Skepticism could very well be our only guide and af- firmation: more than any previous gen- eration in American history the young people of the post-depression generation have the right to voice semi-mystical protests against the tendencies of modern society; or heavily inveigh with Mr. Mencken against the vulgar Demos; or cynically resign ourselves with Mr. Krutch to the belief that, in this world in which we live, unresolvable discord and individual conflict are the funda- mental facts, and then try to make such individual peace as we can. The Little Men of our time can eve:i find, without too much difficulty, plenty of good reas- ons for a man on horseback. Never has the abyss between the cold facts of American experience and the surging optimism of American idealism been more apparent. Our America is a country with 12,000,000 unemployed, with roving bands of jobless youths; a country of hunger, poverty, destitution and despair. In our America small pro- ducers can no longer envision a small man's paradise, the middle-class is a vanishing race, the independent farmer is rapidly becoming a tenant tied to the land. Since 1929 the American people have been living under a maddening national neurosis, the neurosis of fear: they are a people living in deadly fear of want, insecurity and war. These are not factors that we can dismiss with vague indict- ments of the cosmos, or with glib refer- ences to Progress and Evolution and the Beneficence of Nature. They cannot be disposed of by voicing jeremiads against modern industrialism or panegyrics of a perfect commonwealth in our simpler past. These contemporary difficulties are more than passing phases of dais- location, pathological outgrowths that faith and patience will cure: we have. read Thorstein Veblen's diagnosis and the witch-doctors haven't got a chance. Previous generations have complained that the most striking trait of American life is that it is so frequently a tragedy of frustration involving a futile waste of human material, of desires and aspir- ations that are thwarted for the reason that in our chaotic system no medium