Cut with the Kitchen Knife - The Weimar Photomontages of Hannah Hoch.This is the first full-length study in English of the most original Dada/post-Dada collage artist, and as such it's valuable on its face. Going well beyond Hannah Hoch's generally exhibited or reproduced work is a discussion and inclusion of 26 pages from Hoch's ca.-1933 "mass media scrapbook A Macintosh disk file that holds frequently used text and graphics objects, such as a company letterhead. Contrast with "clipboard," which is reserved memory that holds data only for the current session. ," newspaper and magazine images roughly juxtaposed jux·ta·pose tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast. to make up a sort of visual commonplace book commonplace book n. A personal journal in which quotable passages, literary excerpts, and comments are written. Noun 1. commonplace book - a notebook in which you enter memorabilia . Still, the main effect of Maud Lavin's essay may be to close off the market from any book on the same material for a long time. Lavin's text is timid and flat-footed, incapable of suggestion, of moving beyond its own blinkered blink·ered adj. Subjective and limited, as in viewpoint or perception: "The characters have a blinkered view and, misinterpreting what they see, sometimes take totally inexpedient action" literality. It's not until her third-to-last page that she brings her subject into focus: "Within Hoch's avant-garde circle and throughout Weimar Germany, the images and attitudes of modernity were consistently projected onto women." This rich idea is left bare. Perhaps it sparks in the reader's mind a Weimar specter of a coherent, dangerous past (and future?): women are forced to assume the threatening promises of the modern; they become cosmopolitan aliens or invaders in their own society. At the same time, fascism overwhelms both the artistic and the commercial avant-garde, reempowering men as volkisch rebels against the modern, as carriers of salvation and truth. It's a thought--but you have to read this topic sentence back onto the whole book to make it work. Most dispiriting dis·pir·it tr.v. dis·pir·it·ed, dis·pir·it·ing, dis·pir·its To lower in or deprive of spirit; dishearten. See Synonyms at discourage. [di(s)- + spirit.] Adj. are Lavin's pages on Hoch's big, dense Dada montages--notably the 1920-21 Dada-Ernst and the 1919-20 Cut with the Kitchen Knife Dada through the Last Weimar Beer Belly beer belly n. A protruding abdomen, especially as the result of habitual beer drinking. beer belly n (col) → barriga (de bebedor de cerveza) Cultural Epoch of Germany, both reproduced so poorly, in black and white and in color, that you can barely follow Lavin's readings. These are great pictures, explicitly political but also unstable. They speak an altogether different language than the contemporaneous work of Hoch's Dada fellow-traveler John Heartfield John Heartfield (June 19, 1891–April 26, 1968) is the anglicized name of the German photomontage artist Helmut Herzfeld. He chose to call himself Heartfield . Hoch is allusive al·lu·sive adj. Containing or characterized by indirect references: an allusive speech. al·lu , funny, obscene, mysterious, playful, and cool, not just making meanings with visual puns but seeking meaning in punning--and all on a complex field where no image makes merely a single connection to any other. But Lavin has no theory of montage (Guy Debord and Gil Wolman's 1956 "Methods of Detournement" would not have been irrelevant), and her attempts to walk the reader through Hoch's crowded fields, so alive with movement, with meanings changing as your eye slips, are like a badly guided museum tour. Prose as lifeless and unsensuous as Lavin's can't criticize art as sensuous and tactile as Hoch's; it can't even describe it. Greil Marcus is a contributing editor of Artforum. |
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