 |
|
 |
Sarah
Burns
Painting the Dark Side: Art and the Gothic Imagination in Nineteenth-Century
America
Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press,
2004
326 pp.; 104 b/w ills; 15 color ills; index; $39.95 (cloth)
ISBN 0-520-23821-4
|
 |
| |
|
| |
Sarah Burns's new book, Painting
the Dark Side, aims to overturn what we think we know about nineteenth-century
American art. Arguing that previous histories of the era have given
too much weight to the sunny side of the story, to the grand and nationalistic
landscapes of the Hudson River School and the heroic realist canvases
of artists such as Winslow Homer and Thomas Eakins, she offers a corrective.
Burns's nineteenth century is pervaded by the gothic, which she defines
as the "art of haunting, using the term as a container for a
constellation of themes and moods: horror, fear, mystery, strangeness,
fantasy, perversion, monstrosity, insanity" (p. xix). Beyond
the question of style, she understands the gothic to be a mode of
pictorial vision that critiques "the Enlightenment vision of
the rational American Republic as a place of liberty, balance, harmony,
and progress" (p. xix). Consequently, her narrative is one that
takes previously disconnected "oddballs" (as she refers
to them), such as David Gilmour Blythe, William Rimmer, and Elihu
Vedder, and considers them together. Burns also revisits iconic works
by such well-known and well-discussed artists as Thomas Cole and Eakins,
about which it might appear there is nothing left to say, and pulls
them, too, down into the depths of the shadows she sees plaguing the
era. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Of course
much has already been written on the reputed dark side of many of
these artists, especially on Albert Pinkham Ryder and the various
oddballs in her account, as well as, quite richly, on Eakins.1 But
never has the gothic been discussed as a distinct theme in American
art or been subjected to this type of coherent methodological treatment,
as it has been in relation to the American and European literary traditions.
Edgar Allan Poe is the frequently invoked ghost of Burns's study,
and she summons his presence both as an artistic influence and as
a reminder of how fully the culture of gloom infused the era. Her
effort to create a cohesive, if not comprehensive, account is particularly
heroic because so many of her chosen artists resist being classified
in any way, let alone by shared ideals, artistic forbearers, or subject
matter. Instead, Burns connects them by pervasive anxieties about
the big issues of the day: industrial modernity and urbanism, women's
rights, and most centrally, slavery. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The book is arranged into a series
of eight case-study chapters on individual artists, each of which
revolves around one or two key works. Burns groups her chapters into
three broad thematic sections. The first, which includes "Gloom
and Doom" on Cole, and "The Underground Man" on Blythe,
centers on fears about nature and the underside of the modern city.
The second section, encompassing "The Shrouded Past" on
Washington Allston, "The Deepest Dark" on John Quidor, and
"The Shadow's Curse" on Rimmer, deals with slavery and issues
of race; and the third, which includes "Mental Monsters"
on Vedder, "Corrosive Sight" on Eakins, and "Dirty
Pictures" on Ryder, focuses on more personal concerns and pathologies.
By taking a broad swath across the span of a hundred years, and by
tackling such large issues, Burns tells a refreshingly grand story,
one that is propelled by the formation of identity in response to
a modernizing nation. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
For Burns, the gothic is an outgrowth
of the repressed fears and anxieties of those in power, rather than
a means of expression of the disenfranchised, as it has largely been
interpreted in the British literary tradition.2 Even so, her artists
are all outsiders in their own ways, plagued by the threats of financial
insecurity, encroachments by blacks and women, and their own mental
demons, and are thus unable to rest comfortably in the status attendant
to their class, race, and sex. In arguing for the singularity, and
outsider status, of each of her white, male subjects, Burns speaks
to the pervasiveness of the anxiety of the "ruling class"
as a whole at this time. By implication, almost everyone could plausibly
think of him or herself as an outsider, everyone could consider himself
wounded. She proposes that a guilty conscience and a tortured mind
are a part of, and in some ways, fundamental to, modern consciousness. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Apart from its re-telling of the history
of nineteenth-century American painting, Painting the Dark Side
also offers a fairly radical methodological twist. Because of the
decided strangeness of her chosen worksthe ambiguous subject matter
and the evocations of myth and danger that pervade themBurns sees
them as resisting the standard art historical tools, primarily social
history, most often used to unlock the works of the period. The fundamental
premise behind this assumption contains some flaws, as I shall discuss
more fully in a moment, but the result is an ingenious hybrid approach
which merges the biographical with the social. Burns succeeds in constructing
individual histories in which the large events and forces of the era
bear down upon the artists' minds and emergetransformed, mediated,
and eerieon the canvas. Burns has always been interested in questions
of identity, in the intersection between the personal, the social,
and the artistic. But while her Inventing the Modern Artist
(1999) probed the construction of artistic personae at the end of
the nineteenth century, here she takes her biographical approach farther,
and plumbs, speculatively, the depths of the artistic process. At
its best, Painting the Dark Side weaves together a vast array
of influences and allusions, bringing together economic, political
and cultural events with the facts of the artist's life and mind as
manifested in drawings, writings, and family histories. From this
material, Burns makes speculative leaps, producing an often brilliant
account of the motivation behind the making of a work of art. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
It makes perfect sense, for instance,
that Thomas Cole's anxieties about the future of the republic were
wrapped up with those concerning his own place in it. We have been
made aware of Cole's moralizing hand-wringing about the state of America's
progress through the writings of art historians Alan Wallach and Angela
Miller, but few scholars have linked these tendencies to his constant
familial and financial insecurity.3 Burns, on the other
hand, sees Cole's landscapes as "doubly haunted, by history and
by the shadows of his own doubt and despair" (p. 18). Discussing
his painterly fascination with ruins and ruminations on time and decay,
she ties his crushing personal obligations to his horror of instability
and societal disintegration. This horror extended to thoughts about
his life's work, which he felt to be a Promethean labor that would
surely be forgotten by a materialistic and amoral world. Burns's combining
of social and biographical approaches offers a new understanding of
Cole and his work, but it also slyly revises our notion of the American
landscape painting tradition. She writes into its history the artist's
personal anxieties, which were intertwined with his fears about the
new chapter of civilization. While Burns doesn't debunk Cole's position
as the founder of the national school of landscape, she plants within
that tradition the seed of gothic displacement. What was once peripheral
is made central. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
In similar fashion, Burns discusses
Eakins's relentless pursuit of the nude figure in his work as the
product, in part, of an unhealthy and pornographic fetishization of
the body. She places his personal pathologies at the heart of his
obsessively scrutinizing artistic methods, which are here carried
to their logical, if far-reaching, conclusions. Using The Gross
Clinic (1875) as her starting point, Burns implicates Eakins's
work, medical practice, and photography as part of the rationalist,
"dissecting" ethos of the era. She concludes that the painting,
which in its time evoked such grisly practices as grave-robbing and
vivisection, combined the imagery of butchery with art. Its uneasy
mixture of scientific rationality and uncontrollable pain were a clouded
reflection of Eakins's own personality, which swung from the methodically
rational to the wildly adolescent. "Much like the blood welling
up out of the gashed thigh of the patient in The Gross Clinic,
Eakins in art and life overflowed and aggressively pushed against
established limits" (p. 219). As with her interpretation of Cole,
Burns invokes the "dark side" to enhance our understanding
of how these works were perceived in their own time, but also of the
motivation that led to their production. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Burns is at her best when discussing
the artists' reckonings with slavery, which she calls "the keystone
of [her] gothic arch" (p. xix). She writes that "the institution
of slavery and, more generally, racial oppression and violence have
haunted and disfigured history and society alike," and her account
bubbles with the fears and shame that such racism visited upon the
country (p. xviii). In her chapters on Allston, Quidor, and Rimmer,
she draws on the theoretical work of Toni Morrison and Teresa Goddu
to unravel the connotations of "darkness" in American culture,
"a continuum of blackness bearing all the connotations of evil,
danger, and mystery" as well as a significant segment of the
population (p. 102). Her chapter on Allston's Belshazzar's Feast
draws upon the artist's personal history as a southern slaveholder,
descriptions of contemporary slave rebellions, and formal analysis
to masterfully account for the fantastically failed work of art. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Allston was never able to complete
his grand-scale painting, a depiction of the prophet Daniel telling
the evil ruler of Babylon of his kingdom's imminent destruction.
He hid the canvas from view for twenty-six years as he systematically
destroyed and reworked it; when he died, it was still unfinished.
Burns interprets Belshazzar's Feast as a tableau of displaced
guilt: "The subject served as an arena for staging, at some
safe distance, a fearful drama of guilt and impending catastrophe
that in terms any more transparent would be intolerably threatening"
(p. 97). The core of Allston's guilt, according to Burns, was his
slave owner past, which provided the funding (the "blood money")
for his artistic career, and that he was compelled to keep hidden
from his circle of northern abolitionist friends and colleagues.
Allston went to great lengths to distance himself from his birthplace,
refusing even to visit his family. Burns links this distancing to
his repression of the "savagery" and "sensuality"
he associated with slaves, as well as to his exaggeratedly purified
and idealized formal style. The motif of concealment is crucial
for understanding Allston and Belshazzar's Feast, in Burns's
view. His dishonorable personal history, as well as "his overwhelming
fear of revenge and retribution for holding an entire race in bondage,"
had analogies in the painting's portrayal of the imminent end of
a decadent society, and lay partly behind his obsessive need to
hide it from view (p. 79). But as the years wore on, and the work
remained unfinished, the locus of guilt, and the painting's symbolism,
shifted, encompassing Allston's own shame about the painting's lack
of completion. Burns expertly peels apart the picture's overlapping
layers of guilt and signification. What results is a close reading
of a life driven by fear of exposure, and of a painting that was
its sublimated and refracted product. She makes palpable the weight
of the work that Allston made, and unmade, and to which he became
a self-imposed and self-described slave. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Most often, and most especially in
the Allston chapter, the power of Burns's carefully accumulated evidence
is commanding. Occasionally, however, although the vast range of material
she assembles illuminates her chosen works and period, it does not
hang together as a cohesive argument. One example is her discussion
of Vedder's individual turn of mind and his use of drugs as an inspiration
for his imagery. Such threads eventually become lost amongst her later,
somewhat tangentially connected focus on the artist's anxiety about
femininity and the role of the "new woman." All of these
elements help us better understand the motivation behind Vedder's
visionary scenes of Medusa and the desert perhaps, but they are not
necessarily linked, and Burns doesn't argue persuasively that they
are. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
This is never a serious problem with
the book as a whole, because her discussions on nearly every topic
are compelling. A slightly more critical issue is that while Burns
offers convincing case studies for the gothic impulse in the nineteenth
century, she never quite reconciles what larger story she is trying
to tell. It is not clear if she perceives the gothic as an overlooked
theme in paintings both major and minor, a subversive form of art
that existed in opposition to the dominant modes of representation,
or a combination of both. I suspect that Burns would agree with the
latter, although on occasion she argues one position against the other
as a straw man. In her chapter on Blythe's images of urban dystopia,
she writes, "That such an identity could evolve just when artists
of the Hudson River school were celebrating the uncorrupted pastoral
countryside and virgin wilderness is significant. Blythe, nonconformist
and maverick, fashioned a dark complement and alternative to that
bright vision" (p. 74). This analysis comes just after her persuasive
account of Cole's rural, and more "mainstream," gothic,
and so is less convincing for it. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Perhaps the book's biggest flaw stems
from the fact that, although Burns argues for the ultimate enigmatic
irreducibility of each of her images, she remains in some ways tied
to a model of art that can be, in her words, "decoded" (p.
135). Partly as a result of her prioritizing of iconography above
all other aspects of the paintings she examines, she seems unable
to embrace fully the implications of her argument: the inherent mediation
of all images, and not just the gothic ones that are obviously draped
in mystery. To this end, Burns resists allowing her often beautifully
constructed language to evoke such ambiguity, feeling the need to
spell out each work's particular enigma. An example is her discussion
of Rimmer's Flight and Pursuit, (1872), which she distinguishes
from two of his drawings. She claims that unlike the two previous
works, "Flight and Pursuit is highly ambiguous in its
narrative and symbolism. We can decode the first two down to the last
detail…. There is no mystery, no space for uncertainty: they
mean what they mean, and their symbolism is perfectly legible. Flight
and Pursuit, by contrast, is anything but clear. Its story is
a knot that stubbornly resists attempts to pick it apart" (p.
135). Through her writing, Burns consistently searches out the ambiguity
of each image, nailing down its location if not its precise meaning.
About Vedder, she writes that his works "are not literally
about the destabilization of power relations between men and women,
any more than they are direct, unmediated statements of personal resentment….
The path to Vedder's [imagery] was circuitous…. Myth permitted
the utterance of things that were otherwise inexpressible…."
(p. 185). By this point in the book, Burns's readers are quite willing
to follow her rich and evocative argument, but the author herself,
with her empirical art-historical bent, seems a bit uncomfortable
with any untethered analysis. The result is that she occasionally
overstates the case for ambiguity. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Yet, these criticisms are small in the context
of a book of often astounding reach and originality. At its best,
Painting the Dark Side enlightens its readers not only about
its artists, paintings, and period, but also about the intricate workings
of the artistic process, an avenue largely unexplored in contemporary
histories. Burns's readings, often speculative, are always illuminating.
They cause us to look again at the often unexamined, cherished myths
that remain deeply engrained in American culture. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Sarah Newman
University of California, Berkeley
smn@uclink4.berkeley.edu
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
1. On Eakins in particular, see Jennifer Doyle, "Sex, Scandal,
and Thomas Eakins's Gross Clinic," Representations 68
(Fall, 1999), 1-33; Michael Fried, Realism, Writing, Disfiguration:
On Thomas Eakins and Stephen Crane (Chicago: Chicago University
Press, 1987); David M. Lubin, "The Agnew Clinic," in Act
of Portrayal: Eakins, Sargent, James (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1985); and Eric Rosenberg, "Thomas Eakins's The Gross
Clinic as History Painting," in Redefining American
History Painting, ed. Patricia M. Burnham and Lucretia Hoover
Giese (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp. 174-92.
2. Burns distinguishes her American gothic from the English gothic
literary tradition initiated by Horace Walpole, Anne Radcliff, and
"Monk" Lewis.
3. See Alan Wallach, "Thomas Cole: Landscape and the Course
of American Empire," in William H. Truettner, Alan Wallach,
and Christine Stansell, ed., Thomas Cole: Landscape into History,
exh. cat., National Museum of American Art (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1994), and Angela Miller, The Empire of the Eye: Landscape
Representation and American Cultural Politics, 1825-1875 (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 1993).
|
|
|
 |
|