phantom of the arts
by Douglas Messerli
Timothy Materer Vortex Pound, Eliot, and Lewis (Ithaca, New York: Cornell
University Press, 1979)
The attractions of this phantom of the arts are apparent. It brings two
of the most irascible geniuses of the century in Lewis and Pound together with
the artist Guadier-Brezeska, whose life reads as if it had been lived for just
such a romantic-expressionist frenzy that film director Ken Russell conjured up
in Savage Messiah, his film on
Gaudier. Materer further mines the glitter of his subject by adding Eliot and
Joyce, who were tied to Vorticism less as practitioners, than as skeptical
critics of it.
In many ways such an approach is fruitful in that it helps to delineate
some general differences between Pound’s and Lewis’s theories of literature and
those—which have dominated the first half of this (the 20th) century—of Eliot
and Joyce. Whereas Pound and Lewis spoke for an “art of discords,” for a
literature and visual art spun from the energy of which the vortex was a
symbol, Materer perceptively notes that:
Eliot was never a Vorticist in
the sense of a modern who accepts the machine
age and the “new multiverse of
forces.” T. E. Hulme might have been speaking
for Eliot…when he rejected the
symbol of the spiral, with its implication of
progress and optimism, in favor
of the wheel….
And some of Materer’s most useful
analyses center on Joyce’s hilarious satires of Lewis and Pound in the “Ondt
and the Gracehoper,” “The Mookse and the Gripes,” and the “Burrus and Caseous”
fables of Finnegans Wake. In the end,
however, Materer makes the logical mistake of confounding philosophy with
diatribe. Materer, thus, sees Eliot’s editing of The Criterion—vituperatively attacked by both Lewis and Pound—as
remaining “true” to a “Vorticist principle”; in his plea for tolerance of
“antipathies” in Finnegans Wake,
Joyce—as opposed to Pound, Eliot, and Lewis—is seen by Materer to be at the
“still center of the vortex of history”; and throughout his study, Materer
stretches to find a “standard” common to the Vortex, Joyce, “Eliot, the Anglo
Catholic, Pound the monetary reformer and supporter of Italian Fascism, and
Lewis, by turns, the Fascist sympathizer, internationalist, and socialist.”
However hard Materer struggles to bring these diverse authors together
in their ideas of reality, abstraction, and time, and in their readings of the
French philosopher Julien Benda, it remains apparent that there is really no
one common ground. To speak of Vorticist “principles,” to attempt, moreover, to
apply any such principles to Eliot and Joyce, misses the point, it seems to me,
of what Vorticism represented to the original contributors of Blast. For them, it was less an ideology
than an opportunity—for Pound to break away
from the Imagism which Amy Lowell and others had reduced to mere visual
presentation, and for Lewis, Gaudier-Brzeska, Edward Wadsworth, and the English
artists, to break into the public
consciousness. If there was anything else that brought them together it was
only the diatribe (from the Greek, “to rub away”), whose function was to rid
England of its Idol, Prettiness, and open it to the new. The look and the sound
of the new art were as broad-ranged as the “blasts” of the old. As Pound wrote
of it, “The vorticist movement is a movement of individuals, for the protection
of individuality” (“Edward Wadsworth, Vorticist,” The Egoist, I, August 15, 1914).
Certainly, more coherent manifestoes emanated from this public maneuver.
Pound’s brilliant manifesto, Gaudier-Brzeska,
and what Hugh Kenner has described as Lewis’s “satiric-fantastico-polemic
omni-gatherum,” The Apes of God, The Art
of Being Ruled, and Time and Western
Man, all arose more or less as attempts to define what each author meant by
Vortex. But it is in just such works that one quickly perceives how
substantially different were Lewis’s ideas from Pound’s. As Materer rightly
observes, for Lewis—who sought to spatialize art—the enemy was always Bergson
and his time-philosophy; for Pound, however, the power of the vortex lay not in
the stasis at its center, but in its dynamism, in its ability to funnel time
and space into a new reality, into a new combination. In his attempts to find
links between the four writers, Materer has glossed over these and other
important distinctions between even the two who had the closest relationship.
“Beyond Action and Reaction we would establish ourselves,” reads the
first statement of the original Blast
manifesto. Heeding such a statement, future critics and historians of Vorticism
might look less for coherent principles, or even less for what Materer argues
are related “patterns of thinking,” and more carefully investigate how each
artist defined and applied the idea
of Vorticism for his own purposes.
Philadelphia, 1979
Reprinted from Journal
of Modern Literature, VIII, nos. 3-4 (1980/1981)
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