Artists' Writings 1850-Present
Artists' Writings 1850-Present
Artists' Writings 1850-Present
Linda Goddard
To cite this article: Linda Goddard (2012) Artists’ writings, 1850–present: introduction, Word &
Image, 28:4, 331-334, DOI: 10.1080/02666286.2012.740177
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‘operational logic’ that structures both object and text, Lovatt shows how
LeWitt’s writing is integral to his practice, rather than descriptive of it.
In their articles on Degas and Andre, Richard Hobbs and Alistair Rider
focus on artists whose considerable reputations in their apparently chosen
spheres (of painting and sculpture, respectively) have overshadowed their
substantial contributions to another field: that of poetry. However, neither
author is especially anxious to recuperate this neglected aspect of the artists’
œuvres simply by adding another name to the literary canon. Instead, both are
primarily concerned with questions of genre and identity. In his comparative
analysis of sonnets by Degas, and the lesser-known painter-poet Claudius
Popelin, Hobbs poses the question of why both artist-writers chose not to
adopt a transgressively ‘visual’ mode of writing, but instead to try their hand at
one of the most established and demanding of poetic genres. The explanation,
he suggests, might lie in part with the ‘intrinsic pictorialism’ of the sonnet
form, but it is also to be found in a broader tradition of visual/verbal
exchanges (including the pairing of sonnets and etchings in an early livre de
peintres), of which Popelin — although neglected today — was a prime
exponent. Rather than seeing Degas’s sonnets as a minor strand within an
exclusively literary tradition, Hobbs proposes that we situate them instead
within this hybrid context in which artists operated not as amateurs but as key
players.
As with other artists addressed in this collection, the visual dimension of
Andre’s writing is crucial to its interpretation, and Rider notes how — in the
case of his long poem entitled Stillanovel, centred on the life of the photogra-
pher Eadweard Muybridge — the carefully arranged blocks of text may
suggest the form of photographs or film stills. More significant than these
visual analogies, however, is the way in which the poem (based on ‘captions’
— borrowed from documentary texts — for imaginary photographs) resists
categorisation under any one particular genre, while simultaneously evoking
the conventions of many. This flexibility applies equally to the way in which
we classify Andre’s production as either ‘sculpture’ or ‘poetry’. Depending on
how they were distributed, displayed or marketed, his texts could be inter-
preted variously as poems or as works of art, while his standing as an artist has
caused his poetry to be read in the light of his sculpture, rather than on its own
terms.
As the cases of both Degas and Andre make clear, our efforts to identify
individual figures as either ‘artists’ or ‘writers’ are not aided by the fixed
features of any individual work, or even by the balance of an œuvre as a whole,
but are determined instead by factors such as reputation and reception.
Indeed, the very possibility of identifying ‘artists’ writings’ as a grouping
depends on a prior acceptance that the writer, in this case, is understood
predominantly to be an ‘artist’. As I argue in my own essay on artists’ writings
from the nineteenth to the late twentieth centuries, such problems of defini-
tion in themselves mean that we should consider artists’ writings not as
supplementary to their visual practice, nor as a subset of an existing literary
genre (be it criticism, theory or fiction), but as a category with its own — not
yet fully explored — pressures and conventions.