THE WORK OF ART IN THE AGE OF MECHANICAL
REPRODUCTION
WALTER BENJAMIN
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Benjamin was known during his life primarily
for his philosophical essays and as a critic.
As a sociological and cultural critic he
combined ideas of Jewish mysticism with historical
materialism in a body of work which was an
entirely novel contribution to Marxist philosophy.
As a literary scholar, he translated texts
written by Marcel Proust and Charles-Pierre
Baudelaire, and Benjamin's essay "The
Task of the Translator" is one of the
best-known theoretical texts about translation.
His most important writings were: Ursprung
des deutschen Trauerspiels (Origin Of German
Tragic Drama / 1928), Einbahnstraße (One
Way Street / 1928), Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter
seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit (The
Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological
Reproducibility / 1936), Berliner Kindheit
um 1900 (Berlin Childhood around 1900 / 1950,
published posthum), Geschichtsphilosophische
Thesen (Theses on the Philosophy of History
/ 1939, published posthumously).
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The
Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
Walter Benjamin
Our fine arts were developed, their, types
and uses were established, in times very
different from the present, by men whose
power of action upon things was insignificant
in comparison with ours. But the amazing
growth of our techniques, the adaptability
and precision they have attained, the ideas
and habits they are creating, make it a certainty
that profound changes are impending in the
ancient craft of the Beautiful. In all the
arts there is a physical component which
can no longer be considered or treated as
it used to be, which cannot remain unaffected
by our modern knowledge and power. For the
last twenty years neither matter nor space
nor time has been what it was from time immemorial.
We must expect great innovations to transform
the entire technique of the arts, thereby
affecting artistic invention itself and perhaps
even bringing about an amazing change in
our very notion of art (Valéry, 1964).
Preface
When Marx undertook his critique of the capitalistic
mode of production, this mode was in its
infancy. Marx directed his efforts in such
a way as to give them prognostic value. He
went back to the basic conditions underlying
capitalistic production and through his presentation
showed what could be expected of capitalism
in the future. The result was that one could
expect it not only to exploit the proletariat
with increasing intensity, but ultimately
to create conditions which would make it
possible to abolish capitalism itself.
The transformation of the superstructure,
which takes place far more slowly than that
of the substructure, has taken more than
half a century to manifest in all areas of
culture the change in the conditions of production.
Only today can it be indicated what form
this has taken. Certain prognostic requirements
should be met by these statements. However,
theses about the art of the proletariat after
its assumption of power or about the art
of a classless society would have less bearing
on these demands than theses about the developmental
tendencies of art under present conditions
of production. Their dialectic is no less
noticeable in the superstructure than in
the economy. It would therefore be wrong
to underestimate the value of such theses
as a weapon. They brush aside a number of
outmoded concepts, such as creativity and
genius, eternal value and mystery - concepts
whose uncontrolled (and at present almost
uncontrollable) application would lead to
a processing of data in the Fascist sense.
The concepts which are introduced into the
theory of art in what follows differ from
the more familiar terms in that they are
completely useless for the purposes of Fascism.
They are, on the other hand, useful for the
formulation of revolutionary demands in the
politics of art.
I
In principle a work of art has always been
reproducible. Man-made artifacts could always
be imitated by men. Replicas were made by
pupils in practice of their craft, by masters
for diffusing their works, and, finally,
by third parties in the pursuit of gain.
Mechanical reproduction of a work of art,
however, represents something new. Historically,
it advanced intermittently and in leaps at
long intervals, but with accelerated intensity.
The Greeks knew only two procedures of technically
reproducing works of art: founding and stamping.
Bronzes, terra cottas, and coins were the
only art works which they could produce in
quantity. All others were unique and could
not be mechanically reproduced. With the
woodcut graphic art became mechanically reproducible
for the first time, long before script became
reproducible by print. The enormous changes
which printing, the mechanical reproduction
of writing, has brought about in literature
are a familiar story. However, within the
phenomenon which we are here examining from
the perspective of world history, print is
merely a special, though. particularly important,
case. During the Middle Ages engraving and
etching were added to the woodcut; at the
beginning of the nineteenth century lithography
made its appearance.
With lithography the technique of reproduction
reached an essentially new stage. This much
more direct process was distinguished by
the tracing of the design on a stone rather
than its incision on a block of wood or its
etching on a copperplate and permitted graphic
art for the first time to put its products
on the market, not only in large numbers
as hitherto, but also in daily changing forms.
Lithography enabled graphic art to illustrate
everyday life, and it began to keep pace
with printing. But only a few decades after
its invention, lithography was surpassed
by photography. For the first time in the
process of pictorial reproduction, photography
freed the hand of the most important artistic
functions which henceforth devolved only
upon the eye looking into a lens. Since the
eye perceives more swiftly than the hand
can draw, the process of pictorial reproduction
was accelerated so enormously that it could
keep pace with speech. A film operator shooting
a scene in the studio captures the images
at the speed of an actor's speech. Just as
lithography virtually implied the illustrated
newspaper, so did photography foreshadow
the sound film. The technical reproduction
of sound was tackled at the end of the last
century. These convergent endeavors made
predictable a situation which Paul Valéry
pointed up in this sentence: 'Just as water,
gas, and electricity are brought into our
houses from far off to satisfy our needs
in response to a minimal effort, so we shall
be supplied with visual or auditory images,
which will appear and disappear at a simple
movement of the hand, hardly more than a
sign' (Valéry. 1964). Around 1900 technical
reproduction had reached a standard that
not only permitted it to reproduce all transmitted
works of art and thus to cause the most profound
change in their impact upon the public; it
also had captured a place of its own among
the artistic processes. For the study of
this standard nothing is more revealing than
the nature of the repercussions that these
two different manifestations - the reproduction
of works of art and the art of the film -
have had on art in its traditional form.
II
Even the most- perfect. reproduction, of
a work of fix; is lacking in one element
its presence in time and space its unique
existence at the place where it happens to
be. This unique existence of the work of
art determined the history to which it was
subject throughout the time of its existence.
This includes the changes which it may have
suffered in physical condition over the years
as well as the various changes in its ownership.
The traces of the first can be revealed only
by chemical or physical analyses which it
is impossible to perform on a reproduction;
changes of ownership are subject to a tradition
which must be traced from the situation of
the original.
The presence of the original is the prerequisite
to the concept of authenticity. Chemical
analyses of the patina of a bronze can help
to establish this, as does the proof that
a given manuscript of the Middle Ages stems
from an archive of the fifteenth century.
The whole sphere of authenticity is outside
technical - and, of course, not only technical
- reproducibility.
Confronted with its manual reproduction,
which was usually branded as a forgery, the
original preserved all its authority; not
so vis à vis technical reproduction. The
reason is twofold. First, process reproduction
is more independent of the original than
manual reproduction. For example, in photography,
process reproduction can bring out those
aspects of the original that are unattainable
to the naked eye yet accessible to the lens,
which is adjustable and chooses its angle
at will. And photographic reproduction, with
the aid of certain processes, such as enlargement
or slow motion, can capture images which
escape natural vision. Second, technical
reproduction can put the copy of the original
into situations which would be out of reach
for the original itself. Above all, it enables
the original to meet the beholder halfway,
be it in the form of a photograph or a phonograph
record. The cathedral leaves its locale to
be received in the studio of a lover of art;
the choral production, performed in an auditorium
or in the open air, resounds in the drawing
room.
The situations into which the product of
mechanical reproduction can be brought may
not touch the actual work of art, yet the
quality of its presence is always depreciated.
This holds not only for the art work but
also, for instance, for a landscape which
passes in review before the spectator in
a movie. In the case of the art object, a
most sensitive nucleus - namely, its authenticity
- is interfered with whereas no natural object
is vulnerable on that score. The authenticity
of a thing is the essence of all that is
transmissible from its beginning, ranging
from its substantive duration to its testimony
to the history which it has experienced.
Since the historical testimony rests on the
authenticity, the former, too, is jeopardized
by reproduction when substantive duration
ceases to matter. And what is really jeopardized
when the historical testimony is affected
is the-authority of the object.
One might subsume the eliminated element
in the term 'aura' and go on to say: that
which withers in the age of mechanical reproduction
is the aura of the work of art. This is a
symptomatic process whose significance points
beyond the realm of art. One might generalize
by saying: the technique of reproduction
detaches the reproduced object from the domain
of tradition. By making many reproductions
it substitutes a plurality of copies for
a unique existence. And in permitting the
reproduction to meet the beholder or listener
in his own particular situation, it reactivates
the object reproduced. These two processes
lead to a tremendous shattering of tradition
which is the obverse of the contemporary
crisis and renewal of mankind. Both processes
are intimately connected with the contemporary
mass movements. Their most powerful agent
is the film. Its social significance, particularly
in its most positive form, is inconceivable
without its destructive, cathartic aspect,
that is, the liquidation of the traditional
value of the cultural heritage. This phenomenon
is most palpable in the great historical
films. It extends to ever new positions.
In 1927 Abel Gance exclaimed enthusiastically:
'Shakespeare, Rembrandt, Beethoven will make
films . . . all legends, all mythologies
and all myths, all founders of religion,
and the very religions . . . await their
exposed resurrection, and the heroes crowd
each other at the gate' (Gance, 1927). Presumably
without intending it, he issued an invitation
to a far-reaching liquidation.
III
During long periods of history, the mode
of human sense perception changes with humanity's
entire mode of existence. The manner in which
human sense perception is organized, the
medium in which it is accomplished, is determined
not only by nature but by historical circumstances
as well. The fifth century, with its great
shifts of population, saw the birth of the
late Roman art industry and the Vienna Genesis,
and there developed not only an art different
from that of antiquity but also a new kind
of perception. The scholars of the Viennese
school, Riegl and Wickhoff, who resisted
the weight of classical tradition under which
these later art forms had been buried, were
the first to draw conclusions from them concerning
the organization of perception at the time.
However far-reaching their insight, these
scholars limited themselves to showing the
significant, formal hallmark which characterized
perception in late Roman times. They did
not attempt - and, perhaps, saw no way -
to show the social transformations expressed
by these changes of perception. The conditions
for an analogous insight are more favorable
in the present. And if changes in the medium
of contemporary perception can be comprehended
as decay of the aura, it is possible to show
its social causes.
The concept of aura which was proposed above
with reference to historical objects may
usefully be illustrated with reference to
the aura of natural ones. We define the aura
of the latter as the unique phenomenon of
a distance, however close it may be. If,
while resting on a summer afternoon, you
follow with your eyes a mountain range on
the horizon or a branch which casts its shadow
over you, you experience the aura of those
mountains, of that branch. This image makes
it easy to comprehend the social bases of
the contemporary decay of the aura. It rests
on two circumstances, both of which are related
to the increasing significance of the masses
in contemporary life. Namely, the desire
of contemporary masses to bring things `closer'
spatially and humanly, which is just as ardent
as their bent toward overcoming the uniqueness
of every reality by accepting its reproduction.
Every day the urge grows stronger to get
hold of an object at very close range by
way of its likeness, its reproduction. Unmistakably,
reproduction as offered by picture magazines
and newsreels differs from the image seen
by the unarmed eye. Uniqueness and permanence
are as closely linked in the latter as are
transitoriness and reproducibility in the
former. To pry an object from its shell,
to destroy its aura, is the mark of a perception
whose 'sense of the universal equality of
things' has increased to such a degree that
it extracts it even from a unique object
by means of reproduction. Thus is manifested
in the field of perception what in the theoretical
sphere is noticeable in the increasing importance
of statistics. The adjustment of reality
to the masses and of the masses to reality
is a process of unlimited scope, as much
for thinking as for perception.
IV
The uniqueness of a work of art is inseparable
from its being imbedded in the fabric of
tradition. This tradition itself is thoroughly
alive and extremely changeable. An ancient
statue of Venus, for example, stood in a
different traditional context with the Greeks,
who made it an object of veneration, than
with the clerics of the Middle Ages, who
viewed it as an ominous idol. Both of them,
however, were equally confronted with its
uniqueness, that is, its a Originally the
contextual integration of art in tradition
found its expression in the cult. We know
that the earliest art works originated in
the service of a ritual - first the magical,
then the religious kind. It is significant
that the existence of the work of art with
reference to its aura is never entirely separated
from its ritual functions. In other words,
the unique value of the 'authentic' work
of art has its basis in ritual, the location
of its original use value. This ritualistic
basis, however remote, is still recognizable
as secularized ritual even in the most profane
forms of the cult of beauty. The secular
cult of beauty, developed during the Renaissance
and . prevailing for three centuries, clearly
showed that ritualistic basis in its decline
and the first deep crisis which befell it.
With the advent of the first truly revolutionary
means of reproduction, photography, simultaneously
with the rise of socialism, art sensed the
approaching crisis which has become evident
a century later. At the time, art reacted
with the doctrine of 'l'art pour l'art',
that is, with a theology of art. This gave
rise to what might be called a negative theology
in the form of the idea of 'pure' art, which
not only denied any social function of art
but also any categorizing by subject matter.
(In poetry, Mallarmé was the first to take
this position.)
An analysis of art in the age of mechanical
reproduction must do justice to these relationships,
for they lead us to an all-important insight:
for the first time in world history, mechanical
reproduction emancipates the work of art
from its parasitical dependence on ritual.
To an ever greater degree the work of art
reproduced becomes the work of art designed
for reproducibility. From a photographic
negative, for example, one can make any number
of prints; to ask for the 'authentic' print
makes no sense. But the instant the criterion
of authenticity ceases to be applicable to
artistic production, the total function of
art is reversed. Instead of being based on
ritual, it begins to be based on another
practice - politics.
V
Works of art are received and valued on different
planes. Two polar types stand out: with one,
the accent is on the cult value; with the
other, on the exhibition value of the work.
a Artistic production begins with ceremonial
objects destined to serve in a cult. One
may assume that what mattered was their existence,
not their being on view. The elk portrayed
by the man of the Stone Age on the walls
of his cave was an instrument of magic. He
did expose it to his fellow men, but in the
main it was meant for the spirits. Today
the cult value would seem to demand that
the work of art remain hidden. Certain statues
of gods are accessible only to the priest
in the cella; certain Madonnas remain covered
nearly all year round; certain sculptures
on medieval cathedrals are invisible to the
spectator on ground level. With the emancipation
of the various art practices from ritual
go increasing opportunities for the exhibition
of their products. It is easier to exhibit
a portrait bust that can be sent here and
there than to exhibit the statue of a divinity
that has its fixed place in the interior
of a temple. The same holds for the painting
as against the mosaic or fresco that preceded
it. And even though the public presentability
of a mass originally may have been just as
great as that of a symphony, the latter originated
at the moment when its public presentability
promised to surpass that of the mass.
With the different methods of technical reproduction
of work of art, its fitness for exhibition
increased to such an extent that the quantitative
shift between its two poles turned into a
qualitative transformation of its nature.
This is comparable to the situation of the
work of art in prehistoric times when, by
the absolute emphasis on its cult value,
it was, first and foremost, an instrument
of magic. Only later did it come to be recognized
as a work of art. In the same way today,
by the absolute emphasis on its exhibition
value the work of art becomes a creation
with entirely new functions, among which
the one we are conscious of, the artistic
function, later may be recognized as incidental.
This much is certain: today photography and
the film are the most serviceable exemplifications
of this new function.
VI
In photography, exhibition value begins to
displace cult value ail along the line. But
cult value does not give way without resistance.
It retires into an ultimate retrenchment:
the human countenance. It is no accident
that the portrait was the focal point of
early photography. The cult of remembrance
of loved ones, absent or dead, offers a last
refuge for the cult value of the picture.
For the last time the aura emanates from
the early photographs in the fleeting expression
of a human face. This is what constitutes
their melancholy, incomparable beauty. But
as man withdraws from the photographic image,
the exhibition value for the first time shows
its superiority to the ritual value. To have
pinpointed this new stage constitutes the
incomparable significance of Atget, who,
around 1900, took photographs of deserted
Paris streets. It has quite justly been said
of him that he photographed them like scenes
of crime. The scene of a crime, too, is deserted;
it is photographed for the purpose of establishing
evidence. With Atget, photographs become
standard evidence for historical occurrences,
and acquire a hidden political significance.
They demand a specific kind of approach;
free-floating contemplation is not appropriate
to them. They stir the viewer; he feels challenged
by them in a new way. At the same time picture
magazines begin to put up signposts for him,
right ones or wrong ones, no matter. For
the first time, captions have become obligatory.
And it is clear that they have an altogether
different character than the title of a painting.
The directives which the captions give to
those looking at pictures in illustrated
magazines soon become even more explicit
and more imperative in the film where the
meaning of each single picture appears to
be prescribed by the sequence of all preceding
ones.
VII
The nineteenth-century dispute as to the
artistic value of painting versus photography
today seems devious and confused. This does
not diminish its importance, however, if
anything, it underlines it. The dispute was
in fact the symptom of a historical transformation
the universal impact of which was not realized
by either of the rivals. When the age of
mechanical reproduction separated art from
its basis in cult, the semblance of its autonomy
disappeared forever. The resulting change
in the function of art transcended the perspective
of the century; for a long time it even escaped
that of the twentieth century, which experienced
the development of the film.
Earlier much futile thought had been devoted
to the question of whether photography is
an art. The primary question - whether the
very invention of photography had not transformed
the entire nature of art - was not raised.
Soon the film theoreticians asked the same
ill-considered question with regard to the
film. But the difficulties which photography
caused traditional aesthetics were mere child's
play as compared to those raised by the film.
Whence the insensitive and forced character
of early theories of the film. Abel Gance,
for instance, compares the film with hieroglyphs:
'Here, by a remarkable regression, we have
come back to the level of expression of the
Egyptians.. Pictorial language has not yet
matured because our eyes have not yet adjusted
to it. There is as yet insufficient respect
for, insufficient cult of, what it expresses'
(Gance,
1927). Or, in the words of Séverin-Mars:
'What art has been granted a dream more poetical
and more real at the same time! Approached
in this fashion the film might represent
an incomparable means of expression. Only
the most high-minded persons, in the most
perfect and mysterious moments of their lives,
should be allowed to enter its ambience'
(Séverin-Mars, quoted by Gance). Alexandre
Arnoux concludes his fantasy about the silent
film with the question: 'Do not all the bold
descriptions we have given amount to the
definition of prayer?' (Arnoux, 1929). It
is instructive to note how their desire to
class the film among the 'arts' forces these
theoreticians to read ritual elements into
it - with a striking lack of discretion.
Yet when these speculations were published,
films like L'Opinion Publique and The Gold
Rush had already appeared. This, however,
did not keep Abel Gance from adducing hieroglyphs
for the purposes of comparison nor Séverin-Mars
from speaking of the film as one might speak
of paintings by Fra Angelico. Characteristically,
even today ultrareactionary authors give
the film a similar contextual significance
- if not an outright scared one, then at
least a supernatural one. Commenting on Max
Reinhardt's film version of A Midsummer Night's
Dream, Werfel states that undoubtedly it
was the sterile copying of the exterior world
with its streets, interiors, railroad stations,
restaurants, motorcars, and beaches which
until now had obstructed the elevation of
the film to the realm of art. `The film has
not yet realized its true meaning, its real
possibilities ... these consist in its unique
faculty to express by natural means and with
incomparable persuasiveness all that is fairylike,
marvelous, supernatural'. (Werfel, 1935.)
VIII
The artistic performance of a stage actor
is definitely presented to the public by
the actor in person; that of the screen actor,
however, is presented by a camera, with a
twofold consequence. The camera that presents
the performance of the film actor to the
public need not respect the performance as
an integral whole. Guided by the cameraman,
the camera continually changes its position
with respect to the performance. The sequence
of positional views which the editor composes
from the material supplied him constitutes
the completed film. It comprises certain
factors of movement which are in reality
those of the camera, not to mention special
camera angles, close- ups, etc. Hence, the
performance of the actor is subjected to
a series of optical tests. This is the first
consequence of the fact that the actor's
performance is presented by means of a camera.
Also, the film actor lacks the opportunity
of the stage actor to adjust to the audience
during his performance, since he does not
present his performance to the audience in
person. This permits the audience to take
the position of a critic, without experiencing
any personal contact with the actor. The
audience's identification with the actor
is really an identification with the camera.
Consequently the audience takes the position
of the camera, its approach is that of testing.
This is not the approach to which cult values
may be exposed.
IX
For the film, what matters primarily is that
the actor represents himself to the public
before the camera, rather than representing
someone else. One of the first to sense the
actor's metamorphosis by this form of testing
was Pirandello. Though his remarks on the
subject in his novel Si Gira were limited
to the negative aspects of the question and
to the silent film only, this hardly impairs
their validity. For in this respect, the
sound film did not change anything essential.
What matters is that the part is acted not
for an audience but for a mechanical contrivance
- in the case of the sound film, for two
of them. 'The film actor', wrote Pirandello,
'feels as if in exile - not only from the
stage but also from himself. With a vague
sense of discomfort he feels inexplicable
emptiness: his body loses its corporeality,
it evaporates, it is deprived of reality,
life, voice, and the noises caused by his
moving about, in order to be changed into
a mute image, flickering an instant on the
screen, then vanishing into silence.. The
projector will play with his shadow before
the public, and he himself must be content
to play before the camera'. This situation
might be characterized as follows: for the
first time - and this is the effect of the
film - man has to operate with his whole
living person, yet forgoing its aura. For
aura is tied to his presence; there can be
no replica of it. The aura which, on the
stage, emanates from Macbeth, cannot be separated
for the spectators from that of the actor.
However, the singularity of the shot in the
studio is that the camera is substituted
for the public. Consequently, the aura that
envelops the actor vanishes, and with it
the aura of the figure he portrays.
It is not surprising that is should be a
dramatist such as Pirandello who, in characterizing
the film, inadvertently touches on the very
crisis in which we see the theater. Any thorough
study proves that there is indeed no greater
contrast than that of the stage play to a
work of art that is completely subject to
or, like the film, founded in, mechanical
reproduction. Experts have long recognized
that in the film 'the greatest effects are
almost always obtained by "acting"
as little as possible .'. In 1932 Rudolf
Arnheim saw 'the latest trend . in treating
the actor as a stage prop chosen for its
characteristics and . inserted as the proper
place'. With this idea something else is
closely connected. The stage actor identifies
himself with the character of his role. The
film actor very often is denied this opportunity.
His creation is by no means all of a piece;
it is composed of many separate performances.
Besides certain fortuitous considerations,
such as cost of studio, availability of fellow
players, décor, etc., there are elementary
necessities of equipment that split the actor's
work into a series of mountable episodes,
In particular, lighting and its installation
require the presentation of an event that,
on the screen, unfolds as a rapid and unified
scene, in a sequence of separate shootings
which may take hours at the studio; not to
mention more obvious montage. Thus a jump
from the window can be shot in the studio
as a jump from a scaffold, and the ensuing
flight, if need be, can be shot weeks later
when outdoor scenes are taken. Far more paradoxical
cases can easily be construed. Let us assume
that an actor is supposed to be startled
by a knock at the door. If his reaction is
not satisfactory, the director can resort
to an expedient: when the actor happens to
be at the studio again he has a shot fired
behind him without his being forewarned of
it. The frightened reaction can be shot now
and be cut into the screen version. Nothing
more strikingly shows that art has left the
realm of the 'beautiful semblance' which,
so far, had been taken to be the only sphere
where are could thrive.
X
The feeling of strangeness that overcomes
the actor before the camera, as Pirandello
describes it, is basically of the same kind
as the estrangement felt before one's own
image in the mirror. But now the reflected
image has become separable, transportable.
And where is it transported? Before the public.
Never for a moment does the screen actor
cease to be conscious of this fact. While
facing the camera he knows that ultimately
he will face the public, the consumers who
constitute the market. This market, where
he offers not only his labor but also his
whole self, his heart and soul, is beyond
his reach. During the shooting he has as
little contact with it as any article made
in a factory. This may contribute to that
oppression, that new anxiety which, according
to Pirandello, grips the actor before the
camera. The film responds to the shriveling
of the aura with an artificial build-up of
the 'personality' outside the studio. The
cult of the movie star, fostered by the money
of the film industry, preserves not the unique
aura of the person but the spell of the personality,
the phony spell of a commodity. So long as
the movie-makers' capital sets the fashion,
as a rule no other revolutionary merit can
be acredited to today's film than the promotion
of a revolutionary criticism of traditional
concepts of art. We do not deny that in some
cases today's films can also promote revolutionary
criticism of social conditions, even of the
distribution of property. However, our present
study is no more specifically concerned with
this than is the film production of Western
Europe. It is inherent in the technique of
the film as well as that of sports that everybody
who witnesses its accomplishments is somewhat
of an expert. This is obvious to anyone listening
to a group of newspaper boys leaning on their
bicycles and discussing the outcome of a
bicycle race. It is not for nothing that
newspaper publishers arrange races for their
delivery boys. These arouse great interest
among the participants, for the victor has
an opportunity to rise from delivery boy
to professional racer. Similarly, the newsreel
offers everyone the opportunity to rise from
passerby to movie extra. In this way any
man might even find himself part of a work
of art, as witness Vertoff's Three Songs
About Lenin or Ivens' Borinage. Any man today
can lay claim to being filmed. This claim
can best be elucidated by a comparative look
at the historical situation of contemporary
literature.
For centuries a small number of writers were
confronted by many thousands of readers.
This changed toward the end of the last century.
With the increasing extension of the press,
which kept placing new political, religious,
scientific, professional, and local organs
before the readers, an increasing number
of readers became writers - at first, occasional
ones. It began with the daily press opening
to its readers space for 'letters to the
editor'. And today there is hardly a gainfully
employed European who could not, in principle,
find an opportunity to publish somewhere
or other comments on his work, grievances,
documentary reports, or that sort of thing.
Thus, the distinction between author and
public is about to lose its basic character.
The difference becomes merely functional;
it may vary from case to case. At any moment
the reader is ready to turn into a writer.
As expert, which he had to become willy-nilly
in an extremely specialized work process,
even if only in some minor respect, the reader
gains access to authorship. In the Soviet
Union work itself is given a voice. To present
it verbally is part of a man's ability to
perform the work. Literary license is now
founded on polytechnic rather than specialized
training and thus becomes common property.
All this can easily be applied to the film,
where transitions that in literature took
centuries have come about in a decade. In
cinematic practice, particularly in Russia,
this change-over has partially become established
reality. Some of the players whom we meet
in Russian films are not actors in our sense
but people who portray themselves - and primarily
in their own work process. In Western Europe
the capitalistic exploitation of the film
denies consideration to modern man's legitimate
claim to being reproduced. Under these circumstances
the film industry is trying hard to spur
the interest of the masses through illusion-promoting
spectacles and dubious speculations.
XI
The shooting of a film, especially of a sound
film, affords a spectacle unimaginable anywhere
at any time before this. It presents a process
in which it is impossible to assign to a
spectator a viewpoint which would exclude
from the actual scene such extraneous accessories
as camera equipment, lighting machinery,
staff assistants, etc. - unless his eye were
on a line parallel with the lens. This circumstance,
more than any other, renders superficial
and insignificant any possible similarity
between a scene in the studio and one on
the stage. In the theater one is well aware
of the place from which the play cannot immediately
be detected as illusionary. There is no such
place for the movie scene that is being shot.
Its illusionary nature is that of the second
degree, the result of cutting. That is to
say, in the studio the mechanical equipment
has penetrated so deeply into reality that
its pure aspect freed from the foreign substance
of equipment is the result of a special procedure,
namely, the shooting by the specially adjusted
camera and the mounting of the shot together
with similar ones. The equipment-free aspect
of reality here has become the height of
artifice; the sight of immediate reality
has become an orchid in the land of technology.
Even more revealing is the comparison of
these circumstances, which differ so much
from those of the theater, with the situation
in painting. Here the question is: How does
the cameraman compare with the painter? To
answer this we take recourse to an analogy
with a surgical operation. The surgeon represents
the polar opposite of the magician. The magician
heals a sick person by the laying on of hands;
the surgeon cuts into the patient's body.
The magician maintains the natural distance
between the patient and himself; though he
reduces it very slightly by the laying on
of hands, he greatly increases it by virtue
of his authority. The surgeon does exactly
the reverse; he greatly diminishes the distance
between himself and the patient by penetrating
into the patient's body, and increases it
but little by the caution with which his
hand moves among the organs. In short, in
contrast to the magician - who is still hidden
in the medical practitioner - the surgeon
at the decisive moment abstains from facing
the patient man to man; rather, it is through
the operation that he penetrates into him.
Magician and surgeon compare to painter and
cameraman. The painter maintains in his work
a natural distance from reality, the cameraman
penetrates deeply into its web. There is
a tremendous difference between the pictures
they obtain. That of the painter is a total
one, that of the cameraman consists of multiple
fragments which are assembled under a new
law. Thus, for contemporary man the representation
of reality by the film is incomparably more
significant than that of the painter, since
it offers, precisely because of the thoroughgoing
permeation of reality with mechanical equipment,
an aspect of reality which is free of all
equipment. And that is what one is entitled
to ask from a work of art.
XII
Mechanical reproduction of art changes the
reaction of the masses toward art. The reactionary
attitude toward a Picasso painting changes
into the progressive reaction toward a Chaplin
movie. The progressive reaction is characterized
by the direct, intimate fusion of visual
and emotional enjoyment with the orientation
of the expert. Such fusion is of great social
significance. The greater the decrease in
the social significance of an art form, the
sharper the distinction between criticism
and enjoyment by the public. The conventional
is uncritically enjoyed, and the truly new
is criticized with aversion. With regard
to the screen, the critical and the receptive
attitudes of the public coincide. The decisive
reason for this is that individual reactions
are predetermined by the mass audience response
they are about to produce, and this is nowhere
more pronounced than in the film. The moment
these responses become manifest they control
each other. Again, the comparison with painting
is fruitful. A painting has always had an
excellent chance to be viewed by one person
or by a few. The simultaneous contemplation
of paintings by a large public, such as developed
in the nineteenth century, is an early symptom
of the crisis of painting, a crisis which
was by no means occasioned exclusively by
photography but rather in a relatively independent
manner by the appeal of art works to the
masses.
Painting simply is in no position to present
an object for simultaneous collective experience,
as it was possible for architecture at all
times, for the epic poem in the past, and
for the movie today. Although this circumstance
in itself should not lead one to conclusions
about the social role of painting, it does
constitute a serious threat as soon as painting,
under special conditions and, as it were,
against its nature, is confronted directly
by the masses. In the churches and monasteries
of the Middle Ages and at the princely courts
up to the end of the eighteenth century,
a collective reception of paintings did not
occur simultaneously, but by graduated and
hierarchized mediation. The change that has
come about is an expression of the particular
conflict in which painting was implicated
by the mechanical reproducibility of paintings.
Although paintings began to be publicly exhibited
in galleries and salons, there was no way
for the masses to organize and control themselves
in their reception. is Thus the same public
which responds in a progressive manner toward
a grotesque film is bound to respond in a
reactionary manner to surrealism.
XIII
The characteristics of the film lie not only
in the manner in which man presents himself
to mechanical equipment but also in the manner
in which, by means of this apparatus, man
can represent his environment. A glance at
occupational psychology illustrates it in
a different perspective. The film has enriched
our field of perception with methods which
can be illustrated by those of Freudian theory.
Fifty years ago, a slip of the tongue passed
more or less unnoticed. Only exceptionally
may such a slip have revealed dimensions
of depth in a conversation which had seemed
to be taking its course on the surface. Since
the Psychopathology of Everyday Life things
have changed. This book isolated and made
analysable things which had heretofore floated
along unnoticed in the broad stream of perception.
For the entire spectrum of optical, and now
also acoustical, perception the film has
brought about a similar deepening of apperception.
It is only an obverse of this fact that behavior
items shown in a movie can be analysed much
more precisely and from more points of view
than those presented on paintings or on the
stage. As compared with painting, filmed
behavior lends itself more readily to analysis
because of its incomparably more precise
statements of the situation. In comparison
with the stage scene, the filmed behavior
item lends itself more readily to analysis
because it can be isolated more easily. This
circumstance derives its chief importance
from its tendency to promote the mutual penetration
of art and science. Actually, of a screened
behavior item which is neatly brought out
in a certain situation, like a muscle of
a body, it is difficult to say which is more
fascinating, its artistic value or its value
for science. To demonstrate the identity
of the artistic and scientific uses of photography
which heretofore usually were separated will
be one of the revolutionary functions of
the film.
By close-ups of the things around us, by
focusing on hidden details of familiar objects,
by exploring commonplace milieux under the
ingenious guidance of the camera, the film,
on the one hand, extends our comprehension
of the necessities which rule our lives;
on the other hand, it manages to assure us
of an immense and unexpected field of action.
Our taverns and our metropolitan streets,
our offices and furnished rooms, our railroad
stations and our factories appeared to have
us locked up hopelessly. Then came the film
and burst this prison-world asunder by the
dynamite of the tenth of a second, so that
now, in the midst of its far-flung ruins
and debris, we calmly and adventurously go
traveling. With the close-up, space expands;
with slow motion, movement is extended. The
enlargement of a snapshot does not simply
render more precise what in any case was
visible, though unclear: it reveals entirely
new structural formations of the subject.
So, too, slow motion not only presents familiar
qualities of movement but reveals in them
entirely unknown ones 'which, far from looking
like retarded rapid movements, give the effect
of singularly gliding, floating, supernatural
motions'.
(Arnheim, 1932.) Evidently a different nature
opens itself to the camera than opens to
the naked eye - if only because an unconsciously
penetrated space is substituted for a space
consciously explored by man. Even if one
has a general knowledge of the way people
walk, one knows nothing of a person's posture
during the fractional second of a stride.
The act of reaching for a lighter or a spoon
is familiar routine, yet we hardly know what
really goes on between hand and metal, not
to mention how this fluctuates with our moods.
Here the camera intervenes with the resources
of its lowerings and liftings, its interruptions
and isolations, its extensions and accelerations,
its enlargements and reductions. The camera
introduces us to unconscious optics as does
psychoanalysis to unconscious impulses.
XIV
One of the foremost tasks of art has always
been the creation of a demand which could
be fully satisfied only later. The history
of every art form shows critical epochs in
which a certain art form aspires to effects
which could be fully obtained only with a
changed technical standard, that is to say,
in a new art form. The extravagances and
crudities of art which thus appear, particularly
in the so-called decadent epochs, actually
arise from the nucleus of its richest historical
energies. In recent years, such barbarisms
were abundant in Dadaism. It is only now
that its impulse becomes discernible: Dadaism
attempted to create by pictorial - and literary
- means the effects which the public today
seeks in the film.
Every fundamentally new, pioneering creation
of demands will carry beyond its goal. Dadaism
did so to the extent that it sacrificed the
market values which are so characteristic
of the film in favor of higher. ambitions
-though of course it was not conscious of
such intentions as here described. The Dadaists
attached much less importance to the sales
value of their work than to its uselessness
for contemplative immersion. The studied
degradation of their material was not the
least of their means to achieve this uselessness.
Their poems are 'word salad' containing obscenities
and every imaginable waste product of language.
The same is true of their paintings, on which
they mounted buttons and tickets. What they
intended and achieved was a relentless destruction
of the aura of their creations, which they
branded as reproductions with the very means
of production. Before a painting of Arp's
or a poem by August Stramm it is impossible
to take time for contemplation and evaluation
as one would before a canvas of Derain's
or a poem by Rilke. In the decline of middle-class
society, contemplation became a school for
asocial behavior; it was countered by distraction
as a variant of social conduct. Dadaistic
activities actually assured a rather vehement
distraction by making works of art the center
of scandal. One requirement was foremost:
to outrage the public.
From an alluring appearance or persuasive
structure of sound the work of art of the
Dadaists became an instrument of ballistics.
It hit the spectator like a bullet, it happened
to him, thus acquiring a tactile quality.
It promoted a demand for the film, the distracting
element of which is also primarily tactile,
being based on changes of place and focus
which periodically assail the spectator.
Let us compare the screen on which a film
unfolds with the canvas of a painting. The
painting invites the spectator to contemplation;
before it the spectator can abandon himself
to his associations. Before the movie frame
he cannot do so. No sooner has his eye grasped
a scene than it is already changed. It cannot
be arrested. Duhamel, who detests the film
and knows nothing of its significance, though
something of its structure, notes this circumstance
as follows: 'I can no longer think what I
want to think. My thoughts have been replaced
by moving images' (Duhamel, 1930). The spectator's
process of association in view of these images
is indeed interrupted by their constant,
sudden change. This constitutes the shock
effect of the film, which, like all shocks,
should be cushioned by heightened presence
of mind. By means of its technical structure,
the film has taken the physical shock effect
out of the wrappers in which Dadaism had,
as it were, kept it inside the moral shock
effect.
XV
The mass is a matrix from which all traditional
behavior toward works of art issues today
in a new form. Quantity has been transmuted
into quality. The greatly increased mass
of participants has produced a change in
the mode of participation. The fact that
the new mode of participation first appeared
in a disreputable form must not confuse the
spectator. Yet some people have launched
spirited attacks against precisely this superficial
aspect. Among these, Duhamel has expressed
himself in the most radical manner. What
he objects to most is the kind of participation
which the movie elicits from the masses.
Duhamel calls the movie `a pastime for helots,
a diversion for uneducated, wretched, worn-out
creatures who are consumed by their worries
., a spectacle which requires no concentration
and presupposes no intelligence ..., which
kindles no light in the heart and awakens
no hope other than the ridiculous one of
someday becoming a "star" in Los
Angeles' (Duhamel, 1930). Clearly, this is
at bottom the same ancient lament that the
masses seek distraction whereas art demands
concentration from the spectator. That is
a commonplace. The question remains whether
it provides a platform for the analysis of
the film. A closer look is needed here. Distraction
and concentration form polar opposites which
may be stated as follows: A man who concentrates
before a work of art is absorbed by it. He
enters into this work of art the way legend
tells of the Chinese painter when he viewed
his finished painting. In contrast, the distracted
mass absorbs the work of art. This is most
obvious with regard to buildings. Architecture
has always represented the prototype of a
work of art the reception of which is consummated
by a collectivity in a state of distraction.
The laws of its reception are most instructive.
Buildings have been man's companions since
primeval times. Many art forms have developed
and perished. Tragedy begins with the Greeks,
is extinguished with them, and after centuries
its 'rules' only are revived. The epic poem,
which had its origin in the youth of nations,
expires in Europe at the end of the Renaissance.
Panel painting is a creation of the Middle
Ages, and nothing guarantees its uninterrupted
existence. But the human need for shelter
is lasting. Architecture has never been idle.
Its history is more ancient than that of
any other art, and its claim to being a living
force has significance in every attempt to
comprehend the relationship of the masses
to art. Buildings are appropriated in a twofold
manner: by use and by perception - or rather,
by touch and sight. Such appropriation cannot
be understood in terms of the attentive concentration
of a tourist before a famous building. On
the tactile side there is no counterpart
to contemplation on the optical side. Tactile
appropriation is accomplished not so much
by attention as by habit. As regards architecture,
habit determines to a large extent even optical
reception. The latter, too, occurs much less
through rapt attention than by noticing the
object in incidental fashion. This mode of
appropriation, developed with reference to
architecture, in certain circumstances acquires
canonical value. For the tasks which face
the human apparatus of perception at the
turning points, of history cannot be solved
by optical means, that is, by contemplation,
alone. They are mastered gradually by habit,
under the guidance of tactile appropriation.
The distracted person, too, can form habits.
More, the ability to master certain tasks
in a state of distraction proves that their
solution has become a matter of habit. Distraction
as provided by art presents a convert control
of the extent to which new tasks have become
soluble by apperception. Since, moreover,
individuals are tempted to avoid such tasks,
art will tackle the most difficult and most
important ones where it is able to mobilize
the masses. Today it does so in the film.
Reception in a state of distraction, which
is increasing noticeably in all fields of
art and is symptomatic of profound changes
in apperception, finds in the film its true
means of exercise. The film with its shock
effect meets this mode of reception halfway.
The film makes the cult value recede into
the background not only by putting the public
in the position of the critic, but also by
the fact that at the movies this position
requires no attention. The public is an examiner,
but an absent-minded one.
Epilogue
The growing proletarianization of modern
man and the increasing formation of masses
are two aspects of the same process. Fascism
attempts to organize the newly created proletarian
masses without affecting the property structure
which the masses strive to eliminate. Fascism
sees its salvation in giving these masses
not their right, but instead a chance to
express themselves. The masses have a right
to change property relations; Fascism seeks
to give them an expression while preserving
property. The logical result of Fascism is
the introduction of aesthetics into political
life. The violation of the masses, whom Fascism,
with its Führer cult, forces to their knees,
has its counterpart in the violation of an
apparatus which is pressed into the production
of ritual values.
All efforts to render politics aesthetic
culminate in one thing: war. War and war
only can set a goal for mass movements on
the largest scale while respecting the traditional
property system. This is the political formula
for the situation. The technological formula
may be stated as follows: Only war makes
it possible to mobilize all of today's technical
resources while maintaining the property
system. It goes without saying that the Fascist
apotheosis of war does not employ such arguments.
Still, Marinetti says in his manifesto on
the Ethiopian colonial war: `For twenty-seven
years we Futurists have rebelled against
the branding of war as antiaesthetic.. Accordingly
we state: . War is beautiful because it establishes
man's dominion over the subjugated machinery
by means of gas masks, terrifying megaphones,
flame throwers, and small tanks. War is beautiful
because it initiates the dreamt-of metalization
of the human body. War is beautiful because
it enriches a flowering meadow with the fiery
orchids of machine guns. War is beautiful
because it combines the gunfire, the cannonades,
the cease-fire, the scents, and the stench
of putrefaction into a symphony. War is beautiful
because it creates new architecture, like
that of the big tanks, the geometrical formation
flights, the smoke spirals from burning villages,
and many others.. Poets and artists of Futurism!
. remember these principles of an aesthetics
of war so that your struggle for a new literature
and a new graphic art . may be illumined
by them!' This manifesto has the virtue of
clarity. Its formulations deserve to be accepted
by dialecticians. To the latter, the aesthetics
of today's war appears as follows: If the
natural utilization of productive forces
is impeded by the property system, the increase
in technical devices, in speed, and in the
sources of energy will press for an unnatural
utilization, and this is found in war. The
destructiveness of war furnishes proof that
society has not been mature enough to incorporate
technology as its organ, that technology
has not been sufficiently developed to cope
with the elemental forces of society. The
horrible features of imperialistic warfare
are attributable to the discrepancy between
the tremendous means of production and their
inadequate utilization in the process of
production - in other words, to unemployment
and the lack of markets. Imperialistic war
is a rebellion of technology which collects,
in the form of 'human material', the claims
to which society has denied its natural material.
Instead of draining rivers, society directs
a human stream into a bed of trenches; instead
of dropping seeds from airplanes, it drops
incendiary bombs over cities; and through
gas warfare the aura is abolished in a new
way.
'Fiat ars - pereat mundus', says Fascism,
and, as Marinetti admits, expects war to
supply the artistic gratification of a sense
perception that has been changed by technology.
This is evidently the consummation of 'l'art
pour l'art'. Mankind, which in Homer's time
was an object of contemplation for the Olympian
gods, now is one for itself. Its self-alienation
has reached such a degree that it can experience
its own destruction as an aesthetic pleasure
of the first order. This is the situation
of politics which Fascism is rendering aesthetic.
Communism responds by politicizing art.
References
Arnheim, R., 1932: Film als Kunst. Berlin,
p. 176 f.
Arnoux, A., 1929: Cinema Pris, p. 28.
Duhamel, G., 1930: Scenes de la vie future.
Paris, p. 52.
Gance, A., 1927: 'Le temps de 1'image est
venu'. L'Art cinematographique vol. 2, pp.
94f.
Pirandello, L., 1927: Si Gira. Quoted by
Pierre-Quint, L., `Signification du Cinema',
L Art cinematographique vol. 2 p. 14-15.
Valéry, P., 1964: Aesthetics, `The conquest
of ubiquity' p. 225 Trans. Manheim, R., New
York: Pantheon Books, Bollingen Series.
Werfel, F., 1935: ` "Ein Sommernachtstraum",
Ein film von Shakespeare and Reinhardt'.
Neues Wiener Journal, cited in Lu, November.
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