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| Roger
Benjamin
Orientalist Aesthetics: Art, Colonialism, and French North Africa,
1880-1930
(Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press,
2003)
xxi & 352 pp.; 16 color & 123 b/w illustrations, 1 map,
ISBN 0-520-22217-2, $49.95. |
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The study of artistic interactions
across cultures raises a number of challenges to established methods
and paradigms in the art historical study of Western art. Whereas
scholarship tends still to valorize and concentrate on the most innovative
works of the highest quality produced by the most influential artists,
much of the hybrid art generated by cross-cultural interaction is
derivative work of mediocre artistic quality produced by marginal
artists. Cross-cultural study often places enormous emphasis on institutions
and discursive systems, an approach developed within Western art history
but usually limited to contextual background for the interpretation
of great works. And the nature of art's context is in turn quite different,
with intercultural social, political, and cultural networks being
far less stable or homogeneous than in single-society studies. Undertaking
intercultural study, in short, forces us to question and revise many
of our basic assumptions about the aims and values underlying art
historical research. Do we seek to enrich our understanding of great
works of art? Do we try to reconstruct a unified culture? Do we descriptively
map all the multiple strains of ideology in a given society? Do we
use theory to hone our empirical apparatus or use data to valorize
theoretical models? |
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A rapidly
growing body of art historical literature has been addressing these
kinds of intercultural issues, and Roger Benjamin's Orientalist
Aesthetics should take its place alongside the best of these,
both as a rich case study of one network of interactions and as a
methodological model for advancing intercultural research in general.1
As a case study, Benjamin explores various hybrid forms of visual
culture resulting from the French colonial presence in Algeria, and
later Morocco, between the 1850s and 1930s. With great precision and
nuance, he describes and evaluates the contributions of a range of
French and North African artists, critics, collectors, cultural agents,
and institutions. In doing so, he deploys several key analytical methods
adapted especially for intercultural studies: contextualizing exhibition
events in France and Algeria; emphasizing the formation, leadership,
and activities of colonial art societies; tracing competing ideas
of cultural identity and heritage in art historical writings about
Orientalism; examining the role of colonial art schools in variously
promoting French, indigenous, or hybrid forms of art; comparing works
of European high art genres with indigenous categories of fine and
decorative arts; and weighing the deep effects of politics, with an
appropriate complication of simplistic binary models of colonial power
facing indigenous resistance. Marshalling such a mixed bag of analytical
tools is a difficult but necessary chore for monographic intercultural
studies, and Benjamin's example offers much for other scholars to
emulate. |
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The book's most fundamental contribution
is its empirical reconstruction of an entire world of intercultural
practices, ideologies, and cultural policies that have by and large
been neglected by scholars of nineteenth-century art (perhaps less
so by twentieth-century scholars). Still focused primarily on avant-garde
innovation and a teleological narrative history of the period, we
have yet to chart and seriously grasp the complex roles played in
nineteenth-century society by academic art, popular arts, print culture,
art from Northern, Eastern, and Southern Europe, and other substantial
but neglected sectors of visual culture. A string of major recent
studies (bolstered by many smaller ones) has advanced our understanding
of France's substantial engagement with the Middle East and North
Africa, including Benjamin's own 1997 exhibition catalogue Orientalism.2
Orientalist Aesthetics adds to these by offering the first
comprehensive, deeply contextual study of French engagements with
Algeria and Morocco in the later half of the century. By doing so,
it enables us to advance our theoretical modeling of both European
art and intercultural interaction. |
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The book's first chapter (of ten)
sets the stage for this reconstruction by delineating debates over
Orientalism that existed in the years following France's definitive
military conquest of Algeria in 1843. A detailed account of Eugène
Fromentin's Algerian paintings in the 1840s and 1850sset against
his articulate texts on artestablishes some of the basic practices
and values of one branch of Orientalism, notably an anti-ethnographic,
picturesque emphasis on the beauty of undisturbed indigenous people,
landscapes, and customs. Benjamin contrasts this with the more intrusive,
exoticist, and ethnographic work of Jean-Léon Gérôme,
who otherwise does not play a major role in the book. A comparison
of critical writing by Baudelaire and Gautier, who championed exoticism,
and by the naturalist critic Castagnary, who denounced Fromentin,
Gérôme, and exotic imagery in general, brings out the
ambivalent nature of Orientalism in the period, a kind of third pole
crossing the boundaries between myth and reality, classicism and contemporaneity,
literary imagination and political rule. With these practical and
critical principles in place, Benjamin devotes the next three chapters
to a range of French activities anchored in the 1880s and 1890s, followed
by three chapters dealing primarily with the period 1900 to 1930,
and concluding with three chapters emphasizing indigenous and hybrid
cultural activity in the 1910s and 1920s. |
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The section on 1880-1900 begins with
a chapter focused on Renoir. Surveying his landscapes and figure paintings
from two visits to Algiers in 1881 and 1882, the chapter reveals Renoir's
typical tourist's choice of motifs and praise for colonial rule, explains
his difficulty finding native models (due to Islamic prohibitions
against human representation and female public exposure), and discusses
his images of cultural cross-dressing. It then analyzes the writings
of Léonce Bénédite, who saw the depiction of
light as the key modern innovation, but favored mainstream Orientalists
like Albert Lebourg and Léon Belly over the Impressionists.
Benjamin's argument is inconclusive here, with Renoir's Orientalist
paintings coming across as curiously unremarkable, but he does argue
persuasively that Renoir's work challenges the standard critical opposition
between progressive Impressionism and conservative Orientalisma
point pivotal to understanding 'Orientalist aesthetics.' Renoir's
entire Algerian oeuvre is further explored in Benjamin's 2003 exhibition
catalogue Renoir and Algeria, which similarly turns on the
key point that Renoir was a typical Orientalist in his choice of motifs
and apolitical attitude, but was the only later nineteenth-century
artist to endow Algeria with a "modern pictorial treatment."3 |
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Chapters three and four, particularly
rich in new information, shift to institutional analysis, detailing
the central importance of the Society of French Orientalist Painters
in collecting Islamic art, sponsoring Orientalist exhibitions, generating
art criticism, and constructing a canonical history of Orientalism.
Bénédite plays a crucial role here; named curator of
the Luxembourg Museum in 1892, we learn from chapter three that he
mounted the first major retrospective of Orientalist art in 1893,
founded the Society in 1894, and organized a series of retrospectives
from 1895 to 1899 canonizing Alfred Dehodencq, Théodore Chassériau,
Belly, and Gustave Guillaumet. The multi-faceted Society crossed all
kinds of boundaries. Members ranged from Gérôme and Benjamin
Constant to Renoir and James Tissot; exhibition venues ranged from
the Grand Palais to the modernist galleries of Durand-Ruel; and patrons
included Orientalist scholars and colonial politicians, who attended
Arab-theme banquets alongside the painters and critics. The key painter
from the Society seems to be Étienne Dinet, the main focus
of chapter four. Unlike either Renoir or Gérôme, Dinet
developed an ethnographic mode of painting from the 1880s to 1920s
that contravened Fromentin's principles but won great critical praise,
especially from Bénédite. Benjamin interprets such taste
carefully, charting a preservationist ideology among Orientalists
wanting to retrieve pre-colonial authenticity, and explaining that
the French Dinet learned Arabic, converted to Islam, and collaborated
closely with Sliman ben Ibrahim, an Algerian who joined the Society,
frequented Paris, and with Dinet published several illustrated books
on Islam between 1900 and 1920. One of Benjamin's most compelling
points comes here, in showing how this hybrid art form appealed strongly
to both Europeans and Africans, colonizers and colonizeda point
all the more interesting because that aesthetic today is so de-valued
by Western scholars in comparison to both Renoir and Gérôme. |
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As the book moves more firmly into
the early twentieth century, chapter five details the role of the
Society and its painters at the 1900 International Exposition, and
at a series of French colonial exhibitions over the following decade.
Expanding on practices from the 1889 Exposition and following the
innovative lead of Louis Dumoulin, painters provided murals and panoramas
that served both as backdrops for live displays and as popular entertainment
in their own right. The Society and Dumoulin's rival Colonial Society
of French Painters also organized mini-Salons of Orientalist canvases
at these fairs. Benjamin concludes from these activities that painting
was an indispensable technology for such exhibitions because it represented
the exotic "as a theater of representations," reinforcing
a variety of colonial interestspolitical, economic, cultural
(126). The sixth chapter follows the influence of art policies into
the colonies themselves. From 1881, the French government gave eight
annual grants for artists to spend one year traveling outside France,
a practice that encouraged numerous artists, including Dinet and Léon
Carré, to re-focus their academic training on Orientalism.
Victor Barrucand, a liberal French writer and journalist in Algeria,
promoted Franco-Arab cultural cooperation in his influential bilingual
newspaper L'Akhbar and helped establish the Villa Abd-el-Tif,
a kind of Villa Medici overlooking elaborate gardens in Algiers. It
became a pivotal institution in hosting visiting artists from France
(selected by Bénédite), teaching Western art in Algeria,
and generally promoting the dissemination of French art in the colony.
This one-way transfer of cultural technology establishes a clear ground
for subsequent chapters on indigenous and hybrid art practices. |
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In the meantime, however, the seventh
chapter pauses for another single-master interlude focused on Matisse.
Like Renoir in the 1880s, Matisse in 1906 followed a tourist itinerary
in Algeria, but he found the dirty towns and exotic dancers disenchanting.
Benjamin recounts Matisse strugglingand failingto adapt
modernist aesthetics to Orientalist motifs, revealing the depth of
interdependence between aesthetics and subject matter even in Fauvist
abstraction. Matisse was more successful during his two stays in Morocco
in 1912 and 1913. Benjamin argues that, in contrast to utopian views
of Matisse as a pure modernist unsullied by Orientalist ideology,
and despite distancing himself from Orientalist societies, Matisse
nevertheless worked within the "discursive boundaries" (160)
that structured Orientalism, reiterating numerous nineteenth-century
prejudices: romanticizing 'authentic' indigenous subjects through
a Eurocentric visual model; associating North Africa with Roman classicism;
and, in works such as Moroccan Café, choosing motifs
that suggest Muslims are lazy or corrupt yet enviable. And while Matisse's
abstraction was the most radical departure from ethnographic realism,
Benjamin still interprets that formalism as "a complex expression
of . . . Eurocentrism," which was based on shutting out the tense
politics of the moment. (170) He suggests vaguely that in reorganizing
"troubling subject matter into a supposedly neutral abstraction,"
modernist aestheticization "potentially alters a work's political
implications," (180) but this seems outweighed by his more compelling
assertion that the apolitical viewpoint of abstraction was part of
"the specialized consciousness that makes the colonizing aesthetic
possible." (170) The key conclusion, in other words, seems to
be that Matisse's evacuation of Orientalist meanings remained still
firmly rooted in Orientalist ideology and the colonial politics structuring
it. Was it then possible, one wonders, for any painter visiting the
Orient to escape Orientalism? |
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In the last three chapters of the
book, Benjamin moves farthest away from art historical precedents
in reconstructing some of the indigenous and hybrid art practices
within North Africa. He first clearly distinguishes two competing
trends in French colonial cultural policy: "assimilation"
(forcing natives to adopt French culture, as common in Algeria) and
"association" (blending French and native cultures together,
the new norm in Morocco). Chapter eight focuses primarily on Morocco,
made a French protectorate in 1912 and ruled by the associationist
governor Hubert Lyautey from 1912-25. Seeking political stability
and economic benefits, Lyautey preserved Moroccan architecture, funded
books and workshops to perpetuate indigenous rug-making and other
decorative arts, and exhibited Moroccan goods at the Museum of Decorative
Arts and elsewhere. This culminated in the 1925 International Exposition
of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris, where Moroccan
traditional arts were mixed with French modern arts in displays of
model modern homesan example closer to our contemporary Orientalist
modes than to nineteenth-century ones. Chapter nine examines two Algerian
painters who took up assimilationist and associationist approaches
in the 1910s and 1920s. Azouaou Mammeri, who learned European-style
oil painting, appealed to Africans and Frenchmen alike with conservative,
realistic scenes of Islamic sites and manners. Mohammed Racim gained
more lasting fame in France for combining European perspective techniques
with traditional Persian miniature techniques (also foreign to Algeria)
in images of Arab and Muslim life and history. While revealing how
much Racim was inspired by French patronage, including collaboration
with Dinet and Carré, Benjamin also identifies an incipient
anti-colonial nationalism that made Racim popular with Algerians later
in the century. |
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Benjamin's final chapter focuses on
the National Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers, which he shows to be
a decidedly assimilationist institution. It opened in 1930 as part
of the centenary celebrations of French presence in Algeria, and Benjamin
begins by describing the way that organizers reinforced conservative
views of Algeria as Roman land lost to Arabsover fierce protests
by Dinet and others who were promoting equal rights for indigenous
people. He then details the work of Jean Alazard, a Renaissance scholar
who was the museum's curator from 1926 to 1961. Alazard built an elaborate
modern building combining classical and African elements, but he built
a collection that excluded indigenous art and focused on French landscape,
Impressionism, and sculpture, the latter being most associated with
Rome and most offensive to Islam. Most important, the museum aimed
to be the greatest collection of Orientalism, here configured to include,
again, only French painters. The museum failed, Benjamin argues, in
the sense that it never forged an indigenous audience but only reinforced
colonial culture for colonial viewers. Interesting by comparison is
the 1931 International Colonial Exhibition on the edge of Paris, which
Benjamin discusses in his conclusion; it included more art from France's
colonies and broadened the Orientalist canon by including slightly
more progressive styles, especially Gauguin's, but it was similar
in marginalizing the work of Dinet. |
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The book's plethora of empirical information
and analysis is of tremendous intrinsic value and I believe constitutes
its greatest contribution. Complex, multi-layered, and interconnected,
the ten chapters offer a rich representation of how art was produced,
disseminated, and received in France's colonial setting. Informed
by postcolonial theory but never sacrificing historical complexity
for facile theoretical generalizations, the book also enables us to
refine the methods, theories, and assumptions that we bring to our
models of both European art and intercultural interaction. It helps
us grasp how cultural precepts and political ideologies structure
aesthetic taste, and how such taste can be re-interpreted and transferred
across cultures. It enriches our understanding of Realism by revealing
the way contemporary reality in the Orient was perceived as the non-real,
as part of the domain of the classical or literary imagination. It
complicates our picture of Orientalist art, showing it to be fluid
and pervasive rather than a simplistic, unitary academic foil to avant-garde
modernism. And it surprises us by revealing how widely Orientalism
was valued over modernism in the 1890s, how deeply Orientalism structured
avant-garde work by Renoir and Matisse, and how hybrid Orientalist
taste became, making Eurocentric modes of viewing popular among many
indigenous viewers. |
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Methodologically, the book also greatly
advances the study of intercultural interaction, especially in moving
away from artist-centered approaches. Benjamin argues in his conclusion
that it is "the mass of less distinguished artists who most accurately
characterize Orientalism as a cultural phenomenon." (281) Masters
and masterpieces are pushed to the periphery, with analysis focused
more on institutions, discourses, and exhibitions. Most chapters weave
individual practitioners into the context of particular kinds of cultural
activity, while the two chapters on Renoir and Matisse are woven into
the broader context of Orientalist activities as a whole. While Benjamin
justifies his study in part in a traditional wayenriching our
understanding of two canonical masters and "recontextualizing
modernism from the periphery"the text itself goes well
beyond this limited outlook. (3) More interesting than Orientalism's
influence on Renoir and Matisse is its popular appeal, its coercive
power in naturalizing public opinion, its archeological utility, its
use in promoting commercial craft, its capacity for fashioning new
indigenous identities, and, in the end, its profound ambivalence.
All of these findings do little to deepen our understanding of Impressionism
or Fauvism, but they do much to deepen our understanding of the cultural
histories of France and Algeria, and the ways in which they interacted.
Benjamin's approach thus establishes a compelling model for making
cultural systems the primary object of analysis, opening an
alternative to the study of masters and oeuvres. |
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Related to this, finally, the book also helps
reorient the field of study by challenging our habits of periodization.
By selecting the time period of France's greatest colonial development
in North Africa, Benjamin crosses the divide between nineteenth- and
twentieth-century studies. We see many important issues stretching
from the 1880s into the 1920s, continuities in international exhibition
practices, in private and state patronage, in the role of critics.
For historians of nineteenth-century art in particular, this helps
us appreciate that nineteenth-century ideas did not vanish abruptly
in 1900 or 1905, and that attitudes created by Delacroix, Fromentin,
and Gérôme continued to influence French and North African
artists and critics well into the twentieth century. Certainly, avant-garde
styles changed radically, but the many continuities in Benjamin's
book challenge our assumptions about the geographical and chronological
limits of Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Symbolism, and Fauvism,
as well as the supposed discontinuities between them. Viewed in conjunction
with Orientalism's crossing of traditional categories like avant-garde
and academic, these overlaps of style and ideology provide us with
a richly nuanced view of one sector of French and Algerian cultural
production during the peak of France's colonial expansion. |
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Some of these great strengths of Orientalist
Aesthetics do, however, cause difficulties for the reader. Benjamin's
thoroughness in describing context diffuses the focus of some chapters,
and his admirable reticence to over-interpret evidence seems to hold
him back from drawing more expansive conclusions. I think he has earned
the right, for example, to give a bolder opinion about the ways in
which colonial politics affect the production of visual culture in
general.4 I wonder what generalizations we might draw
if anyabout how "cultures" interact. And I wonder
what this detailed case study tells us about how to deal with some
of the problems typical of other intercultural studies, such as conflicting
categories of "art" and "craft", different aims
of artistic production, and different audiences and aesthetic value
systems. The only real flaws in the book, however, are of two kinds.
One is an occasional weakness in organization. In part because of
the complexity and interconnectivity of the various issues, information
is sometimes scattered, with facts or people popping up in one section
or chapter before being more thoroughly introduced in a later one.
Some key statements of argument are also buried in the middle of a
chapter; in my reading, for example, the complicated chapter on Matisse
came into sharp focus one-third of the way through, with the assertion
of formalist Eurocentrism. The second weakness is that several important
works are brushed over with little individual analysis. While this
is again partly justified by the focus on systems rather than works,
it makes it difficult for readers to become familiar enough with specific
examples to add them to a course or incorporate them in their own
scholarly writing. |
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Certainly this book is original and
excellent in extending our study of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century
French art. It illuminates well-studied figures in new ways while
adding many new characters and issues to our view of the period. And
it is the most complex study of Orientalism to date. But an even greater
contribution, I think, lies in its opening up of new ways of thinking
about art historyways that integrate individuals, institutions,
and cultural systems, and that enable us to make sense of the complex,
often contradictory activities and ideologies that arise in any intercultural
interactions, including that between our present and the past we study. |
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Greg M. Thomas, Associate Professor
The University of Hong Kong gmthomas@hkucc.hku.hk |
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1. Some leading monographs I have in mind here are Annie E. Coombes,
Reinventing Africa: Museums, Material Culture, and Popular Imagination
in Late Victorian and Edwardian England (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1994); Stephen Eisenman, Gauguin's Skirt (London:
Thames & Hudson, 1997); Partha Mitter, Art and Nationalism
in Colonial India, 1850-1922: Occidental Orientations (New York
and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994); and Timon Screech,
The Western Scientific Gaze and Popular Imagery in Later Edo
Japan: The Lens within the Heart (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1996; reprinted Curzon, 2002).
2. Chronologically, major works include Gerald Ackerman, The
Life and Work of Jean-Léon Gérôme (London:
Sotheby's, 1986); Roger Benjamin, Orientalism: Delacroix to Klee
(Sydney: Gallery of New South Wales, 1997); Christine Peltre, Orientalism
in Art (New York: Abbeville Press, 1998); Todd Porterfield,
The Allure of Empire: Art in the Service of French Imperialism,
1798-1836 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998); and
Darcy Grimaldo Grigsby, Extremities: Painting Empire in Post-Revolutionary
France (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002).
3. Roger Benjamin, Renoir and Algeria, exh. cat. (New Haven:
Yale University Press; and Williamstown: Sterling and Francis Clark
Art Institute, 2003); quote on p. 4.
4. Frederick Bohrer considers this problem in detail in his review
of the book, in The Art Bulletin vol. 86, no. 1, March 2004,
pp. 176-180.
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