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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
November
Documentaries were 'hot'
in Spain in 1930s, author says
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
11/29/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| University
of Illinois Photo |
| Art
historian Jordana Mendelson is the author of a new
book, “Documenting Spain: Artists, Exhibition,
Culture, and the Modern Nation, 1929-1939” (Pennsylvania
State University Press). |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Today, the term “documentary” usually brings to
mind video exposés of corporate or political wrong-doing. Or
perhaps the exploits of a near-extinct indigenous species struggling
to survive in some remote locale. And while such films may have mass
appeal, they more typically are relegated to the margins of popular
culture.
But it hasn’t always been this way, according to Jordana Mendelson,
a professor of art
history at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
“Despite our contemporary perception of documentary, during the
early 20th century, recording the world in all of its problematic detail
was one of the most vividly complex and urgent of artistic and political
issues,” said Mendelson, the author of a new book, “Documenting
Spain: Artists, Exhibition, Culture, and the Modern Nation, 1929-1939”
(Pennsylvania State University Press).
In fact, the U. of I. author said, documentary – in all its many-splendored
striations, from photography, film, phonographic recordings and exhibitions
to posters, pamphlets and periodicals – was a hot-ticket art form
in Spain in the 1920s and ’30s. During that time, one of most
turbulent and violent periods in that nation’s history, avant-garde
artists, government officials and amateur artists and writers alike
used documentary devices and formats to engage their audiences.
“Documenting Spain” is the result of years of archival research
conducted throughout Spain by Mendelson, whose source material included
historic documentary material from private and state collections. The
richly illustrated text, which includes previously unpublished images,
emerged from the art historian’s commitment to frame what was
happening artistically in Spain “through the lens of artists working
in the country and in touch with historically specific debates about
representation, nationality, technology and tradition.”
Mendelson also wanted readers familiar with European modern art to understand
the role that Spain’s artists played in both international and
local contexts.
“The book comes out of my desire to understand what modernity
looked like in Spain,” she said. “So, for me as an art historian,
it is not only the images that constitute modernity, but where those
images are located. If you look at Spain and who its major artists are,
those artists constitute the fundamental story about European modern
art.”
Central characters in both 20th-century Spanish and European art history
include Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró and Salvador Dalí. The
names and work of all three are recognizable today, even among people
who don’t otherwise know a whole lot about art history, Mendelson
said.
“Picasso’s ‘Guernica’ and cubism, and Dalí
with (widespread publicity surrounding) his centenary in 2004 …
most people are familiar with those artists,” Mendelson said.
“But when they get written into the narrative about European modernism,
often times, they’re written within a narrative that highlights
their relationship to French art.
“In the case of Picasso, Miró and Dalí, they really
are written into a story that revolves around Paris. But those artists
in particular, and other artists like Luis Buñuel, a filmmaker,
have entrenched connections to the history of modern Spain. Even though
most of those artists will look to find fame elsewhere, they are not
disconnecting themselves from Spain. They’re deeply connected
with political events of their times.”
Mendelson said the 1930s was a dynamic period in Spanish history, characterized
by the rise of fascism, spread of communism and economic hard times
brought on by the Depression. All within the span of a decade, the people
of Spain saw the fall of the monarchy, witnessed the declaration of
the Second Republic, were divided by a civil war, and lived under two
dictatorships.
Interestingly, Mendelson said, parties on opposite sides of the political
spectrum often had similar socioeconomic and educational pedigrees,
so it was not surprising to find dissidents and members of the bourgeoisie
employing the same strategies, technologies and tools to communicate
their ideas and visions to the masses.
Furthermore, she wrote: “The form and subject matter of documentary
during this period cannot be separated from concurrent debates in the
arts, literature, social sciences and political theory. Spain was driven
by its largely rural economy well into the 20th century. The Everyman,
who visited his local theater to watch documentaries, and the politician,
who reviewed official publications of government projects with photographic
illustrations, shared a bank of images that were created by artists
from the cities of rural inhabitants for readers and viewers in both
the city and the countryside.
“Documentary became the visual means though which connections
were forged between the center and periphery, both within and outside
of the nation’s borders. During these encounters, those from the
cities introduced the most advanced technologies in mechanical reproduction
(photography, film and the phonograph) to rural inhabitants, while using
these same devices to record Spain’s traditions, customs and dress.”
In presenting her interpretation of how artists and others used documentary
to shape and reflect Spain’s internal and external dialogues about
national and regional identities, Mendelson organized the complex, often
overlapping content of her book in chronological order. “Each
chapter,” she said, “centers on an individual or work and
moves outward from there to consider the dynamic interplay that existed
between single artists and a larger community of artists and images.”
The book begins with a chapter on El Pueblo Español, a model
village commissioned by Spanish officials for display at the 1929 International
Exposition in Barcelona, and concludes with a discussion of another
major exhibition, the 1937 Spanish Pavilion at the Paris International
Exposition, which featured Picasso’s “Guernica.” In
between are chapters on the documentary films of Buñuel and Dalí
and the government-sponsored Misiones Pedagógicas, or education
missions, which spirited young artists and writers out of the city into
the countryside. The author also focuses attention on the work of pictorial
photographer José Ortiz-Echagüe and graphic artist Josep
Renau, and on Dalí’s book “Le Myth tragique de l’Angelus
(The Tragic Myth of ‘The Angelus’),” rediscovered
and published more than 20 years afar it was completed in 1938.
Mendelson is in residence this semester at the Institute for Advanced
Study in Princeton, where she is working on an exhibition and book project
on Spanish Civil War magazines. The exhibition is scheduled to open
at the Museo Nacional Centro de Art Reina Sofia in Madrid in January
2007.
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