style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>From the pages of the Spanish newspaper El Pais erupted a disturbing anecdote. Jose Milicua, a noted art-historian, uncovered evidence that “anarchist” forces used modern art to torture prisoners during the Spanish Civil War. Surfacing at a time when cultural patrimony and the loss of priceless art in Iraq were of concern to the whole world, the story managed to seem an irresoluble addendum. There was something astonishing about such a transgression. While cultural artifacts were mourned as victims of war, we were again reminded of art’s precarious role.
Milicua’s investigations revolved around the construction of torture cells by republican forces in the late 30’s that housed those captured from Franco’s fascist army. They were conceived by an obscure “artist” named Alphonse Laurencic, whose post-war testimony at a military tribunal served as the main source of information. With a mix of technocratic modernism and a brutal psychiatry, Laurencic has entered art history with a nefarious contribution to modernist aesthetics. Inspiration for the cells was drawn from the heights of modernist abstraction: Kandinsky, Moholy-Nagy, Klee, and Dali. The cells were a pastiche of geometric abstraction and surrealist freneticism, along with a theory of supposed psychological properties of line and color. Laurencic coined this style “psychotechnic” and its role was to entirely debilitate the prisoners through meticulous physical and psychological punishment.
style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> The walls of the 6ft by 3ft cells were painted with tortuous geometric or pseudo-surrealist patterns that were thought to cause distress to the viewer. The entire cell itself was constructed in order to force the prisoners to stare at the walls incessantly. Beds were placed at 20-degree angles, making sleeping and sitting practically impossible. style="mso-spacerun: yes"> On the floor, bricks were scattered at irregular intervals to prevent the prisoners from being able to walk forwards or backwards. Tar was sometimes used to cover surfaces, so that contact was unbearable in the daytime heat. All the occupants could do was stand and stare at the oddly shaped walls, covered in supposed psychologically “damaging” shapes and figures, perspective tricks, and off-scale patterns drawn straight from the avant-garde. To enforce the dizzying effect, lighting was manipulated in order to distort the already abrasive decoration.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Beyond the barbaric nature of the cells, the story seemed appalling to many for a deeper reason. It certainly did not go unnoticed, and almost no retelling could escape reflection on its irony: the side which was supposed to be “right” now seemed equally deplorable in the eyes of history. To torture is one thing, but to do so with the great art of the modern age? What can be said when the progressive forces of society are used for the most repressive of means and by those whom history touts as heroic? In this light, the losses the Iraqi museums have suffered can seem more ambiguous than unfortunate. Though the irony was easy to grasp, it was not simple to concede as it is hard to let go of the underlying hope it denies. This was the same hope through which Nadine Gordimer remarked that “art is on the side of the oppressed” since “if art is freedom of the spirit, how can it exist within the oppressors?” As far as modern art is concerned, the arrant ironies of cultural progress have yet to echo the sentiment. Laurencic’s “practice” shows how modern art could easily find itself seduced by barbarism, despite the liberationist jargon of its manifestos.
style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> style="mso-spacerun: yes"> As Milicua’s discovery makes clear, the expanding torrent of modernist culture flirted with a mutual dependence on both cultural progress and social repression. Torture is an almost too predictable extension of a culture of shock, disorientation, distress, and a rampant militarist fetish. Still, it seems far-fetched to imagine the adherents of modernism, with its progressive core, rejecting even the most basic tenets of their own faith. Could the context creating a truly modern art also be a baneful hint of aesthetics immersed from all sides by horror? Are torture, war, suffering and art inexonerably linked?
style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>Perhaps within the depths of radical cultural freedom there is a specter of anomie, where the art of the oppressed could turn itself into a repressive mechanism of subjection, irrationality, and cultural disintegration. Certainly it can be true for what we’ve lost, since these may the punitive damages of democratic change. What are we willing to concede? Perhaps it was this uneasy disjunction that inspired Laurencic. Maybe it is this horror that underscores all attempts to easily resolve the ambiguities of art in general, which our own na�ve need to do. style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Accordingly, El Pais ended its story with the simple thought, affirming that “the creators of such revolutionary and liberating languages could never have imagined they would be intrinsically linked to repression”. |