 |
| |
 |
Introduction:
The Darwin Effect
by Linda Nochlin |
 |
| |
|
|
| |
|
This paper represents the outcome
of about two months of total immersion in Darwin, evolutionary theory
and relevant histories of science. My self-designed crash course began
at the beginning with Darwin for Beginners, an engaging and
informative grown-up comic strip by Jonathan Miller and Borin van
Loon and proceeded to more scholarly texts like Gillian Beer's Darwin's
Plots; Stephen J. Gould's Ever Since Darwin; and The
Wider Domain of Evolutionary Thought, a collection of essays edited
by David Oldroyd & Ian Langham. Then it was on to more specific
studies, like Joy Harvey's brilliant articles and monograph on Clémence
Royer, Darwin's first French translator, and Evelleen Richards' essay
"Redrawing the Boundaries: Darwinian Science and Victorian Women
Intellectuals." The results of my concentrated period of research
have tended to be aleatory if not downright serendipitous, rather
like evolution itself: one thing led to anotheror didn't. I
have divided up my thoughts on the subject, like Gaul, into three,
rather unequal, parts: 1) the "Darwin effect" on some nineteenth-century
art and artists; 2) evolution and the representation of a single speciesthe
horse; and 3) evolution and gender theoryor, less anachronisticallythe
"woman question." |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
I.
Once I began focusing on evolution in preparation for this symposium,
Darwin and the "Darwin effect" seemed to be everywhere.
In the Parrish Museum in Southampton I encountered Carrie Mae Weems'
1999 installation, The Jefferson Suite, where Julia Margaret
Cameron's photograph of Charles Darwin, digitally reproduced on a
semi-transparent banner, filmily omniscient, formed the centerpiece
of the artist's meditation on The Origin of Species, DNA, Thomas
Jefferson, and the impact of evolutionary theory and genetic coding
for Black Americans, past and present. (fig. 1) But of course there
were "Darwin effects"references to evolution and evolutionary
theorybefore Darwin had even published The Origin in
1859. Darwin's controversial publication had been preceded by a plethora
of theories and texts challenging the Biblical account of creation:
notions that nature, instead of being stable and static, the result
of Divine intervention, was perpetually on the move, expanding, developing,
diminishing. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Robert Chambers, Charles Lyell,
and Alfred Russell Wallace had all contributed to the development
of evolutionary thought, though only Wallace had suggested that natural
selection, the keystone of Darwin's evolutionary edifice, played an
essential role in the development of living species.1 |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Two works by minor artists that
I reencountered at an interesting session of the College Art Association
in Chicago in 2001 both bear witness to the effects of evolutionary
ideas before the publication of The Origin. The Englishman
William Dyce and the French graphic artist Charles Meryon both foreground
the impact of extended time, of eons and eons of change and development,
on the immediate perception of the here and now. As Marcia Pointon
has asserted, Dyce's Pegwell Bay: A Recollection of October 5,
1858 "is a painting about time, explored through an image
of a particular moment in time."2 (fig. 2) On the
one hand, the date in the title refers to the day when Donati's
comet appeared at its most brilliant and when its progress was recorded
by astronomers all through Europe. On the other hand, as Pointon
nicely puts it, "Astronomy is accompanied by her sister muse,
geology," apparent in the fossil-embedded chalk cliff and shell-strewn
beach.3 It is clear that Dyce had read Lyell's Principles
of Geology, published from 183033, in which this
revolutionary work established the modern view that the greatest
geological changes were the result of processes taking place over
time rather than being the result of stupendous events.
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The case of Meryon is even more interestingand
less apparent. (fig. 3) In the words of Meryon scholar Roger Collins,
"the block of stone of the title page presents itself as fundamental
to the Eaux-Fortes sur Paris by deliberately depicting the
calcareous, fossilferous building stone on which Paris stands, and
of which it is built. . ."4 The antiquity of Paris
is older than history, Meryon implies with this trope, its origins
embedded in prehistory like the fossil shells in its foundations.
In the "Ministère de la Marine" print from the same
series, Meryon's strange creatureshalf bird, half reptileseem
to wheel in the sky above. And of course Meryon, as a sailor, had
partially repeated Darwin's voyage on the Beagle in his own
sea voyage to Australia and the South Seas from 184246, an experience
he recorded in drawings and prints of ethnic types, exotic "primitive"
modes of social organization, and primitive tools. |
|
| |
|
|
|
 |
| |
| Fig.
4 Gustave Courbet, Roche de Bayard, 1855, Cambridge,
England, Fitzwilliam Museum |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
5 Barend Cornelis Koekoek, Roche de Bayard, 1835, Haarlem,
Teylers Museum |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
6 Edgar Degas, Place de la Concorde, detail. Hermitage
Museum, St. Petersburg |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
7 Edgar Degas, Criminal Physiognomies, 1881. Private
Collection |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
8 Emmanuel Frémiet, Gorilla Carrying off a Native Woman,
1859 |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
9 Edward Muybridge, Annie with Jockey, 1887 |
| |
| |
 |
| |
| Fig.
10 Evolution of the Horse (from Alderton, p. 18) |
|
|
Better known French artists inspired
by various aspects of evolutionary theory, or "transformisme"
as it was called in France, began to look at nature and human nature
differently. According to Petra ten-Doesschate Chu, Courbet was profoundly
influenced by new discoveries in geology, disseminated by his local
Société d'Emulation.5 Clearly fascinated
by the coming-into-being-ness and fantastical erosion of cliffs and
rocks, he recorded them in an objective and scientific way. His take
on the Rock at Bayard, for example, is seized as a geological
phenomenon, stripped bare of the human occupancy and touristic staffage
characteristic of Koekoek's more frivolous version of twenty years
earlier. (figs. 4 & 5) |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Degas, too, was interested in various
aspects of evolutionary theory, no doubt inspired by his friend and
photography teacher, Ludovic Lepic, pictured here in Degas's Place
de la Concorde. (fig. 6) The fascinating vicomte, a polymath equally
engaged in dog-breeding, print-making and photography, was also an
avid student of prehistoric archaeology and ethnography. A member
of the Société d'Anthropologie (a center of transformist
research and debate in Paris), Lepic had close connections with the
newly founded museum of National Antiquities in Saint-Germain-en-Laye,
where his reconstructions of primitive tools were on display; sketches
of these tools were published in his Les Armes et les outils Préhistoriques
reconstitués of 1872.6 According to Harvey Buchanan,
both Degas and Lepic were attracted not only by the photographs Darwin
had used for his study of expression (published in 1874 in the popular
science journal La Nature, which Degas read regularly), but
also in the relevance of photography to the social Darwinian debates
of the 1870s and 80sdebates that focused on crime and degeneracy
in postwar France. Degas's interest in degenerate and criminal physiognomy
is particularly evident in his two portraits of three working class
men, Emile Abadie, Paul Kirail and Michel Knobloch, on trial for gang
murder. (fig. 7) Sketched from life, the pastel portraits were exhibited
in the 1881 Impressionist exhibition with the titles "Physionomie
de criminel." The types conformed to current ideas of biological
determinism, and were applauded by critics who "read in them
a Darwinian subtext and a Lombrosian demonstration of innate criminality."7 |
|
| |
|
|
| |
The idea that certain members of the
urban working class were throwbacks to earlier, more animalistic evolutionary
stages was not Degas's alone. Emmanuel Frémiet specialized in violent,
often titillating sculptures of beasts and/or primitives, insisting,
in the case of his Stone Age Man of 1872 (first shown in the
1872 Salon and then cast in bronze for the Jardin des Plantes in Paris),
that his sculpture was based on scientific observation and not artistic
imagination. As an inscription on the base of the sculpture asserts,
Frémiet's sources for Stone Age Man included the cranium of
a prehistoric man found in archaeological excavations; the weapons
he depicted were almost certainly based on Lepic's "reconstructions"
at Saint-Germain-en-Laye.8 As for his notorious Ape
Carrying Off a Native Woman, the scandal of the 1859 Salon and
obvious ancestor of King Kong, Frémiet is apparently carrying Darwin's
idea of sexual selection to its ludicrous yet hyper realistic extreme.
(fig. 8) |
|
| |
|
|
| |
II.
Now for a look at the impact of evolutionary theory on the representation
of a single species: the horse (equus caballus). I first became
interested in the subject several years ago when I gave a lecture
called "Equine Visions: The Horse in the 19th Century" in
conjunction with an exhibition of Degas's horseracing pictures at
the National Gallery in Washington. What particularly caught my attention
at the time, and continues to intrigue me, is what one might call
a coincidence of major temporal revolutions inscribed on the equine
bodyone epistemological and the other ontological. Concurrent
with Muybridge's creation of the sequential photograph of the horse
in motion was the emergence of the paradigmatic status of the horse
within evolutionary theory, since its development from the eohippus
to modern type could be traced in the fossil record. (figs. 9 and
10) Both ends of the temporal scale are profoundly involved: on the
one hand, the division of time into its smallest, most instantaneous
fragments is projected onto the body of the horse by Muybridge; on
the other, the extension of time into its longest periodization is
inscribed on the trajectory leading from eohippus, extinct about 40
million years ago, to pliohippus, which lived about six million years
ago and which was the direct ancestor of the modern horse (equus
caballas), first domesticated around 6,000 years ago in Ukraine.
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
In terms of epistemology, the flying
gallop, that time-honored logo for equine speed in use from the earliest
days of representation, from sixth-century Persian plates to the time
of Géricault, and still later in the works of Manet and Degas
a more scientifically based, if less aesthetically and expressively
satisfying, version of the speeding horse. (The flying gallop, by
assimilating the horse to the flight of the bird with outstretched
wings signified speed more effectively than the partially raised hooves
recorded by Muybridge's camera). The representation of the gradual
evolution of the modern horse although relatively clear in the paleontological
record, also had some drawbacks. The theory of evolution changed the
ontological status of the horse, in the same way that it drastically
revised mankind's position in the universe. The prehistory of the
horse, in particular, provided graphic evidence that the individual
species were not created by god, at one blowan idea emblematized
in works like Edward Hicks's Peaceable Kingdombut only
gradually, through a partly blind process and through natural selection.
As equine expert Stephen Budiansky points out, "the sheer abundance
of horse bones, and especially horse teeth, in the fossil record has
made the horse the single most frequently cited paradigm of evolution.
There are more than half a million specimens of fossil horses in museums
and academic collections in North America alone."9 |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
In contrast, the sheer abundance of
horse fossils has led to at least two misconceptions about the process
of evolution. As Budiansky writes, "Practically everyone who
has visited a science museum. . .has seen the evolutionary sequence
of fossil horses from tiny eohippus. . .to modern Equus. Starting
as a small, squat, dog-sized, four-toed creature 55 million years
ago, the horse step-by-step turned into the tall, fleet, elegant,
single-hoofed animal of modernity."10 The fossil record
of the horse tells the story of evolution as a process that is simple,
linear, running in a straight line. This notion, known as orthogenesis,
was assumed by many early biologists, and is still the popular conception
of how evolution works: each species in an animal's fossil family
tree gives rise to a (presumably superior) replacement. But in fact,
as Budiansky writes, "paleontologists now know that evolution
is full of branches, dead ends, and blind turns."11
The other related misperception generated by the orthogenetic model
of evolution is that evolution has a purpose or goal. "It is
commonplace. . .for people in love with horses to see this 55-million-year
history as a process of 'perfecting' the horse. . .it is hard for
us not to see modern Equus as superior to its forbears."12 |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Yet the first ancestor of the horse
20 million years ago gave rise to a multiplicity of other branches,
with as many as thirteen genera existing at the same time. What is
at stake is not perfection but survival, and this in turn involves
a complex interaction of genes and the environment." Many of
those predecessors that we so cavalierly dismiss as failures, or as
inferior stepping stones on the path to perfection, were in fact brilliant
successes that flourished for millions of yearsuntil an unpredictable
change in climate finally did them in."13 |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
In its primitive form, the horse,
like the wolfish dog, could serve as an authenticating accompaniment
to "scientific" or would-be scientific representations of
French prehistory. In this print after Fernand Cormon's Gaul on
Horseback, shown at the Universal Exposition of 1900, the Gaul
in question is depicted astride an ancestor of the modern horse. Cormon's
representation draws from new information about the most enduring
of primitive horses, a type called Przewalski's horse. The only true
wild horse to survive into the nineteenth century, Przewalski's horse
was bred in captivity in zoos and private parks; 1,100 still exist,
severely inbred, today.14 Social Darwinism and its explicitly
racist connotations are unavoidably raised when one ponders the parallels
evoked by comparisons between the "primitive" brown-coated
horse and the "purest" and most evolved equine species:
the aristocratic white Arabian. In addition, the equine social structure,
a product of selective breeding to be sure, could be read as an analogue
of the human one. Horse typology, not unlike human physiognomy and
other sorts of evolution-based human categorizations of the time,
could justify a sort of body-type based class structure. With the
light, elegant, aristocratic Arabian or thoroughbred at the top, standing
for the aristocracy, the heavy horse or draft horse, bred for utility
and for pulling heavy loads, were equated with the working classes;
the pony, surefooted, stubby, and good with children, metaphorized
provincials or savage tribes. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
III.
Nowhere is the malleability of Darwinian theoryespecially the
concepts of natural and sexual selectionmore evident, or more
dangerous, than in the question of "woman." Darwinism was
continually deployed to denigrate women as "lower" on the
evolutionary scale, smaller in brain and weaker in physique. It was
called upon to keep men and women in separate spheres, to prove women's
"natural timidity, domesticity, and weak reason," to deny
their "useless" education, and to impede the cause of suffrage.
In short, to cite Flavia Alia in the Journal of the History of
Ideas, "The impact of nineteenth-century science gave such
vigorous and persuasive reinforcement to the traditional dogmatic
view of sexual character that it not only strengthened the opposition
to feminism but disengaged the ideals of feminists themselves from
their philosophic roots of Enlightenment egalitarianism."15 |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
As Evelleen Richards, a leading feminist
historian of evolution, has maintained, after the publication of The
Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex in 1871, and in
light of the threatening progress women had been making in the political
and educational arenas, nineteenth-century feminists became entrapped
within Darwin's framework of biological determinism. The earlier alliance
feminists had forged with sciencean alliance that used naturalistic
interpretations of human nature and society to challenge conventional
wisdom and authorityultimately betrayed them when Darwinism
supplied a naturalistic, scientific basis for the class and sexual
divisions of Victorian society. The only recourse for feminism was
to assert that woman was 'different but equal': to claim for woman
a biologically based 'complementary genius' to man'sa 'genius'
which was rooted in her innate maternal and womanly qualities. Even
a "liberal" evolutionist like Thomas Huxley could write
sweepingly that women were "by nature, more excitable that menprone
to be swept by tides of emotion. . .naturally timid, inclined to dependence,
born conservative."16 Let women become merchants,
barristers, politicians, for Huxley reassuringly asserted that it
would make no difference to the status quo: "Nature's old salique
law will not be repealed, and no change of dynasty will be effected.
The big chests, the massive brains, the vigorous muscles and stout
frames of the best men will carry the day, whenever it is worth their
while to contest the prizes of life with the best women. . .The most
Darwinian of theorists will not venture to propound the doctrine that
the physical disabilities under which women have hitherto laboured
in the struggle for existence with men are likely to be removed by
even the most skillfully conducted process of educational selection."17 |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Yet on the other hand, quite a few
progressive women were ardent Darwinians: both the South African Olive
Schreiner and the American Charlotte Perkins Gilman "presented
their evolution-based arguments for women's rights to the world in
best-selling books. The versions of Social Darwinism presented by
Gilman and Schreiner emphasized those aspects of the Darwinian heritage
applicable to the 'woman question'. Their work stressed the virtues
of altruism, cooperation , and love in the evolution of the human
race."18 What is even more surprising is that the
major figure to disseminate Darwinism to French audiences was a woman:
Clémence Royer. The first to translate Darwin's Origin of
Species into French, in 1862 (and to which she appended her notorious
and controversial preface), Royer was a respected theorist of evolution
and women's rights. She was also a pundit of economics, the only woman
member of the Société d'Anthropologie (she was admitted
on the same day as the vicomte Lepic!), a novelist, an advocate of
unmarried motherhood, and a recipient of the Légion d'honneur
in 1900. A radical, a scientist, and a popularizer of Darwinian ideas
on a grand scale, Royer was, in the words of Renan, "almost a
man of genius". (fig. 11) The equivocal phrase has served as
the title for a recent biography by Joy Harvey. In 1874, Royer criticized
a male-controlled scientific establishment in no uncertain terms:
"Up until now," she declared, "science like law, made
exclusively by men, has too often considered woman as an absolutely
passive being, without instincts or passions or her own interests;
as a purely plastic material capable of taking any form given her
without resistance; a being without the inner resources to react against
the education she receives or against the discipline to which she
submits as part of law, custom or opinion. Woman," Royer affirmed,
"is not made like this."19 |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Finally, I will end as I began, with
a Darwin-infused image by a woman artistin this case, the ninety-year-old
surrealist, Dorothea Tanning, from her 1998 series, "Messages".
I will also end on a note of mysteryappropriate, I believe,
to any consideration of the "Darwin effect," past or present:
what, indeed, is the message conveyed by this uncanny amalgam of evolution-revolution?
Is this meant as an exemplum of surrealist fortuitousness, like Lautréamont's
famous umbrella and sewing machine meeting on the dissecting table?
Or is there a more conscious evolutionary significance in this juxtaposition
of great ape and bicycle? A sense of an immeasurable but concrete
past peering up out of the rotary circle, a look pregnant with futurity
and a futile, hairy wisdom. Tanning's gorillas pose questions about
the position of humanity on this earth and the contrast between the
silent memory of an evolutionary past in a mercurial world of bicycles.
In bringing together the unlikely pairing of the gorilla and bicycle,
the work promises to collapse the dream-like speed of modern society
onto the slow, unspoken evolution of time. Well here I am, an art
historian who has promised to bring together a fascinating, fruitful
and innovative group of papers. The Darwin Effect: Evolution and
Nineteenth-century Visual Culture produced papers as unexpected
yet ultimately meaningful as the meeting of a gorilla and a bicycle
on a canvas. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
1. Jonathan Miller, Borin Van Loon, Darwin for Beginners,
(Random House, 1982), p. 123.
2. Marcia Pointon, William Dyce, 18061864: A Critical
Biography, (Oxford University Press,1979), p. 171.
3. Pinton, p.174.
4. Roger Collins, Charles Meryon: A Life, Devizes, (Wiltshire,
Garton & Co., 1999), p. 153.
5. See "It Took Millions of Years to Compose That Picture"
in S. Faunce and L. Nochlin, Exh. Cat., Courbet Reconsidered,
The Brooklyn Museum, 1988, pp. 57, 61 and passim.
6. On Lepic's work at the museum in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, see
Harvey Buchanan, "Edgar Degas and Ludovic Lepic: An Impressionist
Friendship," Cleveland Studies in the History of Art,
vol. 2, 1997, pp. 32-120.
7. Buchanan, "Edgar Degas and Ludovic Lepic," pp. 84-85.
On Degas's interest in evolutionism and biological determinism,
see also Douglas Druick, "Framing the Little Dancer, Aged
Fourteen," in Richard Kendall, Degas and the Little
Dancer (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988), pp. 77-96.
8. Buchanan, p. 83.
9. Stephen Budiansky, The Nature of Horses, (New York, The
Free Press, 1997), p. 16.
10. Budiansky, p. 16.
11. Budiansky, p. 17.
12. Budiansky, p. 18
13. Budiansky, p. 19.
14. Budiansky, p. 262.
15. Cited in Evelleen Richards, "Darwin and the Descent of
Women", in D.Oldroyd and I. Langham, eds, The Wider Domain
of Evolutionary Thought, (Dordrecht, 1983), p. 96, fn. 152.
16. Cited in Richards, 1983, p. 92.
17. Cited in Richards, 1983, pp. 92-93, fn. 143.
18. Roseleen Love, "Darwinism and Feminism: The 'Woman Question'
in the Life and Work of Olive Schreiner and Charlotte Perkins Gilman"
in Oldroyd & Langham, eds., The Wider Domain of Evolutionary
Thought, pp. 113-114.
19. This is from her paper "Sur la natalité" a
repressed communication read before the Société d'Anthropologie
de Paris in 1874. Cited in Joy Harvey, "Strangers to Each Other:
Male and Female Relationships in the Life and Work of Clémence
Royer", in Uneasy Careers and Intimate Lives: Women in Science,
17891979, ed. Pnina G. Abir-Amand and Dorina Outram, (New
Brunswick, NJ,
Rutgers University Press, 1997), p.146.
|
|
|
 |
|