ALAN MAGEE STUDIO
NAPOLEON CROSSING THE ALPS, by Jaques Louis David, 1805
IT CANNOT BE REMIDIED, by Francisco de Goya, 1808
Art as Social Commentary
by Alan Magee, for the film Alan Magee: art is not a solace, 2019
Violence and war have been among the subjects addressed by art since antiquity, but most descriptions of war, from The Iliad to Jacques Louis David’s painting of 1805, Napoleon Crossing the Alps, have emphasized and praised patriotism and military valor.
In the modern era, the painter Francisco de Goya (1746-1828) has been widely recognized as the first artist to depict war as unmitigated tragedy. In his Disasters of War, a cycle of etchings recording the horrors of Napoleon’s occupation of Spain in the first decade of the nineteenth century, Goya reported on every form of barbarity—from torture to the executions of Spanish insurgents. Other prints in Goya’s series make it clear that the occupied Spanish were equally capable of atrocities against their French oppressors.
One of Goya’s etchings depicts a Spanish father being brutally separated from his wife and children by a French soldier. The terror in the face of the father is palpable. Goya’s caption for that print reads, “I Saw This”.
Goya’s themes echo through the two centuries since the Disasters of War series was created, appearing again and again in visual art, in literature, in music, whenever injustice overruns the bulwarks of civil society. The rise of fascism in Europe in the 1930s produced both unimaginable horrors and some of the most arresting art made in the twentieth century. The plays and poetry of Bertolt Brecht, the sculpture, drawings, and prints of Käthe Kollwitz, and the photomontages of John Heartfield and Hannah Höch are quintessential examples of art in resistance to tyranny.
Art that has championed the underclass and advocated peace and social justice has historically had to make its own way in the world. Established institutions embrace socially-critical art, if at all, long after the particular issues have been laid to rest. Goya’s Disasters of War was not published in his lifetime; it condemned current events too directly. The prints were not seen outside of Goya’s studio until thrity-six years after the artist’s death.
Closer to our own time and place, the songs of Woody Guthrie and Phil Ochs, the iconic anti-war posters of the Vietnam era by Lorraine Schneider and Seymour Chwast, and the long-running Bread and Puppet Theater created by Peter Schumann defied the ethical indifference of America’s elite cultural institutions and reached out to audiences directly.
Today, the work of contemporary artists Klaus Staeck, Al Farrow, Sue Coe, Robert Shetterly, Peter Kinnard and Banksy testify to the multi-faceted and irrepressible conscience of art.
As Jean Dubuffet wrote, “Art will not lie down in the bed that is made for it... its best moments are when it forgets what it is called”.
The Art of Weimar-era Germany
“Ah, what an age it is, when to speak of the trees is almost a crime,
because it is a kind of silence against injustice.”
Bertolt Brecht, from An Die Nachgeborenen (To Those Not Yet Born)
In the final days before Germany’s 1918 surrender to the Allies at the end of the First World War, the German Admiralty ordered its fleet to launch a suicidal “honor battle” against the British. The sailors revolted and within days the rebellion had spread from the Kiel naval base to cities throughout the country. The German people were sick of the war and the years of official lies promising imminent victory. The Kaiser was quickly deposed and a new German republic was declared
A German National Assembly convened in the city of Weimar and it unveiled a democratic government in August of 1919. The new constitution gave German citizens unprecedented liberties— freedom of speech and privacy were guaranteed and censorship in any form was prohibited. Women gained the right to vote and many immediately won seats in parliament.
But the senseless tragedy of the lost war left a climate of grief and dread, and the punishing Treaty of Versailles gutted the country’s economy. Hunger was widespread. Hyperinflation rendered the personal savings of ordinary Germans worthless, while former war profiteers resumed their conspicuously privileged lives. In this atmosphere of gross financial inequity, post-war trauma and previously unimagined freedoms, the arts flourished.
In film, Robert Weine’s The Cabinet of Dr. Calagari (1920), and W.H. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922) epitomized Weimar-era foreboding. Calagari’s expressionist, low-budget sets made of painted canvas and wood conveyed a world of madness. Murnau’s use of location shooting and imaginative photography in Nosferatu created a mood of palpable menace that has not lost its edge today. The visual artists Käthe Kollwitz, George Grosz, Otto Dix, John Heartfield, Felix Nussbaum, and their contemporaries attacked the culture and the business of war, the exploitation of workers, the greed of the privileged, and the ignorance and complicity of the German people.
Though the styles of these artists differed, their work belongs to a shared attitude, a worldview, and an art movement known as the Neue Sachlichkeit, or New Objectivity. This art looked at the world with unblinking sobriety. It was deeply moral, but streetwise, irreverent, and often darkly funny. (Think of the repartee in the screenplays of Billy Wilder, a writer/director who came of age in Weimar-era Berlin.) The artists of the Neue Sachlichkeit were not shocked or bewildered by human behavior, as if discovering evil for the first time. They revealed the world that is, not the world that should be.
Alan Magee, 2019