V - w - if Av -. - Page Six PERSPECTIVES PERSPECTIVES O THE SOUL TAKES FLIGHT ... l'y By CARL GULDBERG This once was Earth. This scorched and crusted sphere, this surface pricked by barb and pocked by shell, once cherished life. No living thing is here: no single seed remains, nor single cell. Now that the world is wholly dead and still, no more will the wounded moan and, tortured, cry: no longer can the cannon belch and kill, with all remaining thunder in the sky. Now all of man's impeccable prided art has reached its ultimate and done its part. Each misered bit of genius in the brain has burst itself. War will not come again; for man has moved deftly, ignorant of where, z S URREALISM is, as the well known New York art dealer, Julien Levy, says, "not a rational, dogmatic and consequently static theory of art, but a point of view, and as such applies to Painting, Literature, Play, Behavior, Politics, Architecture, Photography and Cinema." Hence we are all surrealists in certain of our tendencies. The true sur- realist has this point of view in regard to everything he comes in contact with or experiences. The line between surrealism and any- thing out of the ordinary or fantastic, however, must be distinctly drawn. To the average American, anything that does not make sense, yet has been put before him in all good faith, can be labeled surrealist. Correspondingly, any- thing the average American creates that does not make good sense he calls sur- realist. This misunderstanding is reflected in the magazine articles published in this country on surrealism. The majority of the authors of these articles, have not the least idea of the true philosophy of the movement they are writing about. Therefore, their articles read like a Ubangi savage's dissertation on mag- netism. Another place where the mis- understanding is evident is in the art museums. An enterprising director will gather together a sample or two of sur- realist art, add to that a touh of cub- ism, a sprinkle of dada, a bit of futur- ism, a little symbolism and a number of samples of pure trash, and label the whole surrealist. No wonder the Ameri- can public has been led astray! What, then, is surrealism? According to Andre Breton, leader and co-founder of the group, surrealism is Pure psychic automatism, by which it is intended to express, verbally, in writing, or by other means, the real process of thought. Thought's dictation, in the absence of all con- trol exercised by the reason and outside all aesthetic or moral pre- occupations. Surrealism rests in the belief in the superior reality of cer- tain forms of association neglected heretofore: in the omnipotence of the dream, and in the disinterested play of thought. It tends definitely to do away with all other psychic mechanisms and to substitute itself for them in the solution of the principle problems of life. Therefore, surrealist painting is the recording on canvas of the unconscious thought of the artist. Surrealist litera- ture is the recording on paper of the unconscious ideas of the writer. In Iact, the basic premise of surrealism is the validity of unconscious thought as a material for art. The surrealists believe that the unconscious mind holds the secret of reality which they attempt to portray in their paintings and writings. Since surrealism is not a "rational, dogmatic" theory of art, no accurate, definite, and all inclusive definition or explanation can be made for the term. Breton's definition may explain sur- realist production, but it does not fully cover the surrealist point of view. A clear understanding of this can be ar- rived at only by an inquiry into the sur- realist philosophy. II "Nothing can assure me of reality," says Louis Aragon. "Nothing, neither the exactness of logic nor the strength of sensation, can assure me that I do not base it on the delirium of interpre- tation." And the rest of the surrealists corroborate his statement. What is real- ity? What is logic? Can our brains tell us what is or is not real? Or our minds? Or are our brains and our minds one and the samei.j, i Bergson argues that mind is not iden- Beware, swift wild things flying south! Beware! I watch your flight! Defeat is bitter in my mouth .. . I fear the winter night ... Yes, I have seen your wild hearts stilled And I have known your pain. I have been empty ... I have killed .. . And I shall kill again. --HARWOOD SMITH tical with brain. The surrealists take him up on this statement and add that what goes on in the unconscious mind is more real than what the brain makes of the outside world. To back their be- lief in that, the surrealists turn to Freud.; and also are encouraged anew by Berg- son, who says To explore the most sacred depths of the unconscious, to labor in the sub-soil of the consciousness: that will be the principle task of psy- chology in the century which is opening. I do not doubt that won- derful discoveries await it there. This unconscious, or real, mind is made up of impulses and desires which have not been modified by the forces of civilization which act upon the in- dividual, according to Freud. Thus, the surrealist points out, the uncon- scious represents the real being, un. tainted by his environment, uninflu- enced by the customs and habits of man- kind, and there, in the unconscious, may be found the key to the greater reality, surreality, surrealism. As for considering the dream as a words, portraying on canvas the uncon- scious thought of the artist. It would be nearly impossible to paint maturely and yet conform with Andre Breton's original definition of surreal- ism. The surrealist painters have devel- oped several methods whereby the repre- sentation of unconscious thought and art may be linked. Three of these are the dream picture, the association pic- ture and the resemblance picture, or frottage, a style invented by Max Ernst. In painting the first type of picture, the artist remembers his dream, and from the dream selects a particularly vivid scene. This scene he reproduces on canvas as accurately as possible, painting from the vision in his mind, just as he would paint a portrait of a posing figure. In the second type he paints an object in the middle of his canvas. Around this he fills in other ob- jects that the first one makes him think of, doing so quickly so as not to inter- rupt his train of thought, and not forc- ing himself to make any associations. In painting the third type of picture, the artist stretches his canvas over some reliable iey to the unconscious, the sur- on to his own extinction-unaware Old Mrs. Haskins stood by her gate, Picking roses her grandmother planted. The roses were sweet and eternally young. But the gate was old and it slanted. Old Mrs. Haskins looked at the gate And heaved a regretful sigh. It had been such a well-hung gate, before That Yankee jerked it awry. U. Short and long in the sunset The mountain wife and her man Walked back from their day in the city By a road where busses ran. She kept her eyes fixed silent On the concrete tape of the road, And shifted the bag of flour And the fatback, to ease her load. He walked free-handed before her, And searched with his woodsman's eye For the Indians and grizzlies that lurked there When Daniel Boone went by. -CHAD WALSH -WILLIAM GRAM 34~t P EG~aP30IXJC/gAa1Iiue4. 1645 : 1939 Stern marshland. and stern sky, A frozen lane opening to the sea, One insurgent gull high Above the maiden birds chambered In a dark tree. realists turn once more to Freud, who says, "The interpretation of dreams is the Via Regia to the knowledge of the unconscious in mental life." Though the surrealists, in this man- - ner, seek philosophy, psychology and theory for their movement from Berg- son and Freud, they have built around their movement a philosophy of their' own, original to a great extent, forming a workable theory and a worthwhile purpose for surrealism. Under this new philosophy, surrealism appears as a protest against the habit of analyzing and rationalizing. The sur- realists become social revolutionaries. They believe that "one great obstacle to reform is the ossification of the term- inologies which condition mass action. As a solvent to a logical difficulty they apply an analogical cure. By the juxta- position of unrelated objects or processes in their pictures, and unrelated words and ideas in their writing, they hope to set in motion in the mind of observer or reader a revolutionary train of thought which will culminate in an apt- itude for the revision of the social con- cepts." James Loughlin IV truly says that the type of mental process which prevents a man from thinking that watches could drip from tree branches is identical to that which prevents a banker from thinking that industry could be so.cial- ized. HI Perhaps of all surrealists' activities, their painting has attracted the most at- tention. It is in this field that the sur- realist can interpret his theories visually, so that the world can see. What, to a surrealist, is painting? Surrealist Salvador Dali calls painting "photography, by hand and in colors, of concrete irrationality and the world of the imagination in general." In other object'and rubs pigment on it. The re- sulting light and dark smudges are then touched up, a few lines added to give unity or coherence to the picture, and the result is anything you might want to call it. All three of these methods then represent the workings of the un- conscious mind. One thing that always bothers the layman looking at a surrealist picture is, what does it mean? He does not, cannot, understand them. Of course he can't understand, not knowing the philosophy of surrealism. Still, he asks, why do the pictures baffle me so? Amid Dali answers, it seems to me perfectly obvious when my enemies, my friends and the public in general pretend not to understand the meaning of the images that arise and that I tran- scribe in my pictures. How can you expect them to understand when I myself, who am their 'maker,' un- derstand them as little? The fact that I, myself, at the moment of painting, do not understand my own pictures, does not mean that these pictures have no meaning; on the contrary, their meaning is so pro- found, complex, coherent and in- voluntary that it escapes the most simple analysis of logical intui- tion. To describe my pictures in everyday language, to explain them, it is necessary to submit them to special analysis and preferably with the most ambitiously objective sci- entific rigour possible. Then all ex- planation arises a posteriori, once the picture already exists as phe- nomenon. Surrealist painting and painters may generally be divided into two types, al- though they are not entirely independ- ent of one another. One type of artist records vividly what he experiences, concretely, so that the layman might pass through the same experiences vicar- iously. The other records his reactions to the experiences in an abstract man- ner, so that t reaction, rat] The first type as Dali and I is more that G. Frey labels ers, the secor perhaps diffe calling the fi the second a An exampli picture entit painted by R shows a man in the skin o style. His left bell, one ball front of wher The face sho His right han ing a bone. i a barrel, on rectangular s cut through triangular ho and cubes is they are refle a background Perhaps th realist pictur Memory," pa first type. I watches dra dead tree, o from which a horse-like o center. In t with a rocky the right, The second harder to des example is throwing a st 1926. The "pt a ghost-like distorted foot bird, flying u fluff surmoui head equippe Attached to t line on a dar moon. The v, dark arc. T drops from t noted by a d bisected by a passes across age." The ei definite and u The most a ment at the Dali. He wa Barcelona, S he was able masters, yet c of technique, the technique He greatly ad Dali was ex in Madrid f then to Paris there in 1927 Ism, and beg panel hardly He painted, w assisted in t two surrealist and "L'age ID the United E exhibiting he Julien Levy. One of the concerns a 1 give in Londc He appeared stomped dowr ing a deep-s dagger at his cue in one h Russian wol Nearly overec helmet could 1 "I just wante ing deeply in The greates to Picasso. F around 1927, In today's European winter Englishmen Withdrew to an alien and narrow bough. No Puritan, no Miltonic gull cleaves With AREOPAGITICA the impoverished lean Evening below. -DORIS BAILEY With wild snorting and pawing of academic ground, and rolling of red, goaded eyes tie bull pursues the lecture-stand matador who is ' waving the Aristotelian crimson and deftly evading, stepping away, enticing, infuriating, intangible, maddening- Oh to stamp that Schopenhauer in dust ! Oh to toss thatPlato high on triumphant horns! -NELSON BENTLEY