Focussing
on specific examples, describe the way that modernist art and design was a
response to the forces of modernity.
The Modernity era began around 1760 and ended at
about 1960. During this time lots of monumental changes occurred which helped us
to progress to the world that we live in today, these are often called the
forces of Modernity, a set of aesthetic movements that emerged in Europe. Here M.
Barnard also describes the situation, ‘Every institution, cultural tradition,
social class, economic practice and political relationship that had existed
before had been fundamentally transformed. In such a context, then, it is only
to be expected that European institutions and traditions of art, along with
beliefs about art and design, were also profoundly shaken.’ (Barnard, 2005,
p.120.) Many major impacts on society took place in this time including the
Industrial and French revolution where some powerful forces were unleashed on
the world. The main change because of these was urbanisation, where people
moved from a rural life to one of industry and industrialisation. Large towns
were quickly formed due to the rapid increase of population, this had a huge
impact on the development of science and technology. People’s lives became
linked with their shift patterns, which led to less freedom due to them being
controlled by their working hours. The split of work and free time made class a
lot more noticeable and people’s interaction with each other changed
dramatically. These classes were called ‘socio-political’ and were created due
to increased production and consumption, perhaps the birth of the society we
have today. Population in these industrial areas also increased as people fled
there for work and to be part of the big cultural change. Technology was a new
phenomenon during this time with the invention of new materials such as
concrete, steel, plastics, aluminium and reinforced glass which led to mass
production. On a design level Modernism is associated with innovation and
experimental work, focussing on progress and moving on from previous ideas to
create entirely new and original developments. Designers of this time took
their work very seriously and had the belief that they could change the world
for the better and for good. It was also thought that each area of the Arts
should remain pure and separate from everything else. There are four key features
that sets Modernism apart from previous styles of art. The first is ‘aesthetic
self-reflectiveness’ where artists and designers consider their own practice by
using that practice, using shape, line colour and form. For example it is a
piece of design that comments on itself as piece of design or a painting that
documents the appearance of paint by using it to show its qualities. The second
is ‘montage’ which is a name for the ‘cut and paste’ phenomenon of the time,
which involves taking previously unrelated elements and combining them or
disrupting a sequence that has some sense of narrative. Next is the use of
‘paradox, ambiguity and uncertainty.’ Finally the fourth is the designers in
some way are presented as divided or experiencing inner conflict that concerns
the loss of an ‘integrated individual subject’.
One
of the places to be most affected was Paris and by 1900 it was the most
progressive city in the world. It was specifically designed to be the most
modern city, which is why a renovation called Hausmannisation occurred to
ensure this. Paris was developed into an entirely different place to what it
once was, large and open boulevards replaced crumbling alleyways and electric
street lighting was introduced in an attempt to reduce crime and push the poor
out to the suburbs. The effect of this still remains today. There was a strong
rivalry between Paris and London during the 1800’s due to the cultural race,
new exhibitions would take place across the years. The most significant of
these would be the Eiffel Tower, finished in 1889. At 1056 feet it rose above
the traditional architecture and was at the time the tallest manmade object on
earth. It was said to represent the triumph of the present over the past, which
as a statement sums up the main belief of modernity as a whole. The man that
created this historic structure was Gustave Eiffel who was 57 at the time The
Paris World Fair’s commissioners chose him to take on the job. He was also an
engineer not an architect, which could have been the secret of its success, or
the fact that The Tower could be viewed by millions of people compared to the
select few that attended galleries to view this new modernist art.
Because of this new mantra believed by the majority
in the modern world you can see changes in the art of the period, in order for
it to stay relevant and fashionable as it can be said that ‘society modernises
art’. Although, ‘Modern Art also involves a variety of challenges. Here we may
identify three: some art may represent a challenge to the modern world, for
example to the persistence of social inequality, or to the way individuals’
lives have been transformed by technology. In addition, modern art may also,
involve a variety of challenges to traditional forms of art itself. It follows
from this that such art also involves a challenge to conventional forms of
response to art… a deliberate challenge to ‘taste.’’ (Meecham and Wood, 1996,
p.7) Paris was a city that became an area of study for artists who turned their
attention away from myths and wealthy individuals as their subjects for art.
Their new focus was not to paint the world but to show the experiences of
people in this new, urban environment. For example, this painting by
Caillebotte, which depicts a man stood at a window looking out onto the streets
of Paris. As you can see the new, modern architecture is visible. The
composition has a cropped appearance brought from the invention of photography.
This movement really pushed artists into thinking of
new styles, for example classical painting followed the rule of thirds but this
soon gave way to the idea of cropping. Artists also abandoned realism, as
surrealism was something that a camera couldn’t capture. In relation to this
here is a piece by French artist Robert Delaunay, an impressive piece capturing
the symbol of Modernity in France. Robert Hughes comments on this piece by
saying, ‘Delaunay must have painted The Tower thirty times, and he was almost
the only artist to paint it at all… ‘The Red Tower’ shows how fully Delaunay
could realise the sensations of vertigo and visual shuttling… The Tower is
seen, almost literally as a prophet of the future – its red figure, so reminiscent
of a man,
ramping among the silvery lead roofs of Paris and the distant puffballs of
cloud. That vast grid rising over Paris with the sky reeling through it became
his fundamental image of modernity: light seen through structure.’ (Hughes,
2000, p.21.) The development of optical science led to experimentation in
styles of painting, like dots of contrasting colour. Also, because of the new
camera technology new bird’s eye view angles documented a big shift in visual
culture. Another innovative painting style was that of staying true to
materials, letting paint appear as paint and not trying to use it to represent
something else. An example of this is work by American, abstract painter
Jackson Pollock who is best know for his ‘drip and splash’ style. To achieve
this look he attached his canvas to the floor instead of an easel and
discarded brushes for sticks or trowels to manipulate the paint that he poured
from a can. You can tell that he used this technique because ‘You cannot get
that kind of looping line with oil paint on a brush. (Wood, 1996, p.109) He
also commonly mixed in sand, broken glass and other matter. In the example here
you can clearly see his style in action, the paint appears very free without
any intention to replicate another form or material, which was the purpose of
works like this. It Is clear that Pollock takes the ‘aesthetic
self-reflectiveness’ approach, spoke about earlier, to apply to his work.
Cementing him as a modernist artist.
As well as Architecture and Fine Art being radically
changed these changes also applied to Graphic Design. There is a known idea as
to what Graphic Design was during Modernism, which relates to two main themes,
the rejection of ornament and the law that form follows function. Which should
describe the highest of design as something that is unornamented and the way it
looks should be fundamental to and a direct result of the job it was created to
perform. ‘The roots of modern typography are entwined with those of
twentieth-century painting, poetry and architecture. Photography, technical
changes in printing, new reproduction techniques, social changes and new
attitudes have also helped to erase the frontiers between the graphic arts,
poetry and typography and have encouraged typography to become more visual,
less linguistic and less purely linear. (Spencer, 2004, p.11) Before the
modernist age type had serifs and often had a high stroke contrast. However,
this all soon changed with the sans serif style. Type became about appearing
simple and stripped down with the main focus being communication not decoration
and although this look was around in the 1800’s it wasn’t until the Modernist
era that it became popular. During the nineteenth century the monumental
changes happening in society went un- recognised by the printing community. As
typefaces grew bigger and fatter due to advertising and the competition of
production the printer still clung to the small book layout. As time passed
designers became more forceful, although printing still revolved around using
metal type on a letterpress, the typographers of this era had ideas that would
push this process to the limits and discarded the horizontal discipline that
moveable type inflicted. They started to look at the composition with the
recipient in mind and how they would view it, rather than through the eyes of
the producer. Printers now had to tackle very difficult demands of non-linear
compositions and way before the development of methods such as
photo-typesetting and dry transfer lettering. Another common feature in
typefaces was ‘unicameral’ type, where all the text was lower case and the
capitals discarded. An example of this is one of Herbert Bayer’s sans-serif
fonts called ‘Bayer’. The most popular style of type for the modernists was the
‘Grotesk’, the name was made by William Thorowgood who was the first person to
produce a sans serif type with lower case. Akzidenz-Grotesk is perhaps the most
famous of this style a modern interpretation of this is Helvetica, which as one
of the most successful fonts of all time shows its good design.
As time passed the idea of Modernism faded to become
less popular and by the 1960’s it could have been said that it was over and a
new era began, Post Modernism.
Jenna
Morse
Word
Count: 1809
Word
Count Excluding Quotes: 1500
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