{"title":"插图艾略特:爱德华·麦克奈特·考弗和阿里尔诗歌","authors":"John T. Quin","doi":"10.1353/mod.2023.a902603","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ion, and flattening the planes of perception emerged from his poster designs of the 1910s–20s prior to his success in the London publishing world from the mid1920s. From 1915, the British transport administrator Frank Pick commissioned a series of posters by Kauffer depicting London boroughs and various English countryside landscapes, as well as advertisements for winter sales reached by underground train. Kauffer’s Winter Sales posters feature abstracted shapes in bold colors to represent commuters in coats with stippled effects and diagonal stripes to represent snow and rain. He assimilated different styles and schools of graphic art into his poster designs and later illustrations, and his range of underground posters united the conventions QUIN / edward mcknight kauffer and the ariel poems 61 of Japanese color prints, Toulouse-Lautrec’s poster designs, and Vorticist painting (Haworth-Booth, Kauffer, 27–28). The Winter Sales posters were particularly admired by Fry for the experimental design and abstract forms, which Fry believed the public were more receptive to on their daily commute: “It is surprising, what alacrity and intelligence people can show in front of a poster which if it had been a picture in a gallery would have been roundly declared unintelligible. The judicious frame of mind evidently slows the wits very perceptibly.” According to Fry, the silhouetted, simplified, and abstracted forms of shoppers braving the weather were readily identified as such on the underground hoardings. Outside the galleries of high art, or indeed beneath them in Kauffer’s subterranean gallery, the public was more receptive to abstract art and experimentation. The ubiquity of poster adverts might allow the modern artist to smuggle in a new style and cultivate new modes of appreciating art. For Kauffer, this abstract simplicity was a fundamental property and requirement of modern poster design. In The Art of the Poster (1924), he stressed that the compositional arrangement of a poster was necessarily different from “pure painting” because of the demands of advertising. The poster must convey a set of facts to the spectator with a perceptible immediacy that also “remain[s] impressed upon his memory.” Kauffer’s reputation as the preeminent “poster-king” has been duly cemented by recent critical and curatorial attention (Lewis, Blasting and Bombardiering, 212). However, his prolific illustration work and book cover designs have received less attention. Elements of Kauffer’s poster design aesthetic, his insistence on symbols and compositional arrangements that were simple but memorable, proved complementary to his burgeoning work as an illustrator. From the 1920s–30s, he worked for some of the most prominent publishers in London, including Francis Meynell at Nonesuch Press, Victor Gollancz, Harold Curwen, Richard de la Mare at Faber and Gwyer, and Leonard and Virginia Woolf at Hogarth Press. Similarly, by the mid-1920s, Eliot was a well-established cultural figure in Bloomsbury through the success of The Waste Land in 1922, and from 1924–25, parts I to IV of The Hollow Men appeared as discrete poems in various combinations in Commerce, the Criterion, the Dial, and Harold Monro’s Chapbook Miscelllany. Kauffer’s first minor illustration of an Eliot poem was a commissioned cul-de-lampe, or typographic ornament, in Monro’s Chapbook magazine for “Doris’s Dream Songs,” which would become parts II and III of The Hollow Men. Eliot insisted on a tailpiece illustration to the poem because he wanted two pages to himself. He informed Monro that “as I particularly should not be willing to appear on the same page with anyone else, I will immediately produce another 1⁄2 page of verse if you have any difficulty with the cul-de-lampe.” To fill the bottom half of the page, Kauffer executed a small black-and-white vignette that alluded to the “cactus land” and “stone images” of the poem. In this tailpiece, we can see key features of Kauffer’s illustrative aesthetic: the use of abstraction and simplification, the interplay of light and shade, and crucially, a discerning eye for textual detail in Eliot’s difficult modernist verse. As Lorraine Janzen Kooistra has noted, an aesthetics of graphic minimalism took hold at many publishers and little magazines of the high modernist period in Britain. On the one hand, a formalist emphasis on the words alone informed the presentation M O D E R N I S M / m o d e r n i t y 62 of verse on the page, free from the contamination of elaborate textual ornaments or worse yet commercial advertisements. On the other hand, avant-garde illustrators of the period sought more ingenious and subtle means of incorporating graphic work into the text that drew nuanced interpretations of the relationship between text and image. Faith Binckes has noted that the status of illustration was elevated in the 1910s–20s as the art of the line and reproducible monotone art in little magazines was set in opposition to the elaborate and sometimes gaudy reproductions of paintings as full-color illustrations in Victorian books. In the 1890s, Walter Crane criticized the tradition of photomechanically reproduced paintings as book illustrations prevalent in the late nineteenth century as “simply pictures without frames,” bearing no formal relation to the type and layout of the printed page. Crane preferred linework or woodcut book decorations that shared the same processes of book design and printing as the type and letterpress. The black-and-white graphic austerity of modernist magazines like Rhythm and Blast was celebrated through a critical language of graphic art that emphasized rhythm, pattern, linear simplicity, and abstraction. Like Wadsworth, C. R. W. Nevinson, and William Nicholson, Kauffer’s linear poster art and black-andwhite linework was commended by critics for its tone and rhythm, terms formerly reserved for the art of painting, as we will see was the case in Fry’s discussion of Kauffer’s Burton illustrations. Marianne Moore surmised of Kauffer’s art at large that the “shadows are as arresting as objects” and the reserved “language of blacks and grays is color.” Part I of “Doris’s Dream Songs” printed in Monro’s Chapbook roughly translates into part II of The Hollow Men, recalling “death’s dream kingdom.” On the following page of the Chapbook, part III of the dream song marks a tonal shift with deictic gestures towards a series of desert images: This is the dead land This is cactus land Here the stone images Are raised, here they receive The supplication of a dead man’s hand Under the twinkle of a fading star. In the barren scene of Eliot’s poem, towering stones and cacti appear as totems in the “dead land,” receiving supplication and prayers without the promise of redemption. Eliot is returning to a favorite trope from The Waste Land by hollowing out a religious iconography: the twinkling star, the stone idols, and elsewhere in the dream songs, the blackened river. Kauffer’s cul-de-lampe fills the empty space of the second page with images appropriate for the barren landscape. Where sections I and II in the Chapbook publication revolve around fluid and immaterial settings—“death’s dream kingdom,” “death’s other kingdom,” “between life and death”—the arid iconography of the final section provides appropriate material for a tailpiece illustration. That Eliot was prepared to add verses rather than be placed alongside another poet shows his intention for a closing section befitting either a blank space or a similarly barren tailpiece. Of QUIN / edward mcknight kauffer and the ariel poems 63 course, the periodical publication of poems or prose alongside corresponding graphic material is typically lost in their standardized reprinting in collections or anthologies. If the Chapbook printing of “Doris’s Dream Songs” shows this in miniature, Eliot’s subsequent Ariel Poems underscores how indirect deictic and ekphrastic gestures take on a new significance when read alongside Kauffer’s cover and frontispiece illustrations. 1925 was a seminal year for Kauffer. He received a retrospective solo exhibition of his poster designs by the Arts League of Service and moved further into the business of book illustration with a substantial commission from Nonesuch and Curwen presses. The Nonesuch Press illustrated edition of Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy was a new departure in several respects. It was Kauffer’s first illustrated book, commissioned by Francis Meynell. The project also afforded Curwen Press the opportunity to experiment with watercolor stenciling for several illustrations in forty specially printed vellum copies of the book, making the Nonesuch edition of Burton’s Anatomy the first large scale pochoir stencil operation in Britain. Kauffer therefore availed himself of Curwen’s stencil work from its inception, experimenting with opaque gouache and lighter stippled effects in stencil to create his varied and textured illustrations. Executing the pochoir technique by hand was immensely time consuming, and Harold Curwen employed a team of stencilers, all women from the Curwen bindery, to complete pochoir illustrations in watercolor or gouache. Paul Nash identified a “new aesthetic value for the ‘stencilled’ book” in the light of Curwen Press publications by Kauffer, Edward Bawden, Barnett Freedman, and others. Nash admired how “the colour for each picture is applied separately by hand” at Plaistow, “not impressed by a mechanical device.” There was also an admirable fidelity to original designs as the Curwen stencilers worked by hand. The stencilers used the same brushes as Kauffer in his originals and incorporated small sponges and toothbrushes to create the stippled and splattered effects (Nash, “The Stencil,” 113). In subsequent years Kauffer refined his craft alongside the Curwen stencilers with commissions for Melville’s Benito Cereno (1926), Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1929), Miguel de Cervantes’s Don Quixote (193","PeriodicalId":18699,"journal":{"name":"Modernism/modernity","volume":"30 1","pages":"57 - 81"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Illustrating Eliot: Edward McKnight Kauffer and the Ariel Poems\",\"authors\":\"John T. Quin\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/mod.2023.a902603\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ion, and flattening the planes of perception emerged from his poster designs of the 1910s–20s prior to his success in the London publishing world from the mid1920s. From 1915, the British transport administrator Frank Pick commissioned a series of posters by Kauffer depicting London boroughs and various English countryside landscapes, as well as advertisements for winter sales reached by underground train. Kauffer’s Winter Sales posters feature abstracted shapes in bold colors to represent commuters in coats with stippled effects and diagonal stripes to represent snow and rain. He assimilated different styles and schools of graphic art into his poster designs and later illustrations, and his range of underground posters united the conventions QUIN / edward mcknight kauffer and the ariel poems 61 of Japanese color prints, Toulouse-Lautrec’s poster designs, and Vorticist painting (Haworth-Booth, Kauffer, 27–28). The Winter Sales posters were particularly admired by Fry for the experimental design and abstract forms, which Fry believed the public were more receptive to on their daily commute: “It is surprising, what alacrity and intelligence people can show in front of a poster which if it had been a picture in a gallery would have been roundly declared unintelligible. The judicious frame of mind evidently slows the wits very perceptibly.” According to Fry, the silhouetted, simplified, and abstracted forms of shoppers braving the weather were readily identified as such on the underground hoardings. Outside the galleries of high art, or indeed beneath them in Kauffer’s subterranean gallery, the public was more receptive to abstract art and experimentation. The ubiquity of poster adverts might allow the modern artist to smuggle in a new style and cultivate new modes of appreciating art. For Kauffer, this abstract simplicity was a fundamental property and requirement of modern poster design. In The Art of the Poster (1924), he stressed that the compositional arrangement of a poster was necessarily different from “pure painting” because of the demands of advertising. The poster must convey a set of facts to the spectator with a perceptible immediacy that also “remain[s] impressed upon his memory.” Kauffer’s reputation as the preeminent “poster-king” has been duly cemented by recent critical and curatorial attention (Lewis, Blasting and Bombardiering, 212). However, his prolific illustration work and book cover designs have received less attention. Elements of Kauffer’s poster design aesthetic, his insistence on symbols and compositional arrangements that were simple but memorable, proved complementary to his burgeoning work as an illustrator. From the 1920s–30s, he worked for some of the most prominent publishers in London, including Francis Meynell at Nonesuch Press, Victor Gollancz, Harold Curwen, Richard de la Mare at Faber and Gwyer, and Leonard and Virginia Woolf at Hogarth Press. Similarly, by the mid-1920s, Eliot was a well-established cultural figure in Bloomsbury through the success of The Waste Land in 1922, and from 1924–25, parts I to IV of The Hollow Men appeared as discrete poems in various combinations in Commerce, the Criterion, the Dial, and Harold Monro’s Chapbook Miscelllany. Kauffer’s first minor illustration of an Eliot poem was a commissioned cul-de-lampe, or typographic ornament, in Monro’s Chapbook magazine for “Doris’s Dream Songs,” which would become parts II and III of The Hollow Men. Eliot insisted on a tailpiece illustration to the poem because he wanted two pages to himself. He informed Monro that “as I particularly should not be willing to appear on the same page with anyone else, I will immediately produce another 1⁄2 page of verse if you have any difficulty with the cul-de-lampe.” To fill the bottom half of the page, Kauffer executed a small black-and-white vignette that alluded to the “cactus land” and “stone images” of the poem. In this tailpiece, we can see key features of Kauffer’s illustrative aesthetic: the use of abstraction and simplification, the interplay of light and shade, and crucially, a discerning eye for textual detail in Eliot’s difficult modernist verse. As Lorraine Janzen Kooistra has noted, an aesthetics of graphic minimalism took hold at many publishers and little magazines of the high modernist period in Britain. On the one hand, a formalist emphasis on the words alone informed the presentation M O D E R N I S M / m o d e r n i t y 62 of verse on the page, free from the contamination of elaborate textual ornaments or worse yet commercial advertisements. On the other hand, avant-garde illustrators of the period sought more ingenious and subtle means of incorporating graphic work into the text that drew nuanced interpretations of the relationship between text and image. Faith Binckes has noted that the status of illustration was elevated in the 1910s–20s as the art of the line and reproducible monotone art in little magazines was set in opposition to the elaborate and sometimes gaudy reproductions of paintings as full-color illustrations in Victorian books. In the 1890s, Walter Crane criticized the tradition of photomechanically reproduced paintings as book illustrations prevalent in the late nineteenth century as “simply pictures without frames,” bearing no formal relation to the type and layout of the printed page. Crane preferred linework or woodcut book decorations that shared the same processes of book design and printing as the type and letterpress. The black-and-white graphic austerity of modernist magazines like Rhythm and Blast was celebrated through a critical language of graphic art that emphasized rhythm, pattern, linear simplicity, and abstraction. Like Wadsworth, C. R. W. Nevinson, and William Nicholson, Kauffer’s linear poster art and black-andwhite linework was commended by critics for its tone and rhythm, terms formerly reserved for the art of painting, as we will see was the case in Fry’s discussion of Kauffer’s Burton illustrations. Marianne Moore surmised of Kauffer’s art at large that the “shadows are as arresting as objects” and the reserved “language of blacks and grays is color.” Part I of “Doris’s Dream Songs” printed in Monro’s Chapbook roughly translates into part II of The Hollow Men, recalling “death’s dream kingdom.” On the following page of the Chapbook, part III of the dream song marks a tonal shift with deictic gestures towards a series of desert images: This is the dead land This is cactus land Here the stone images Are raised, here they receive The supplication of a dead man’s hand Under the twinkle of a fading star. In the barren scene of Eliot’s poem, towering stones and cacti appear as totems in the “dead land,” receiving supplication and prayers without the promise of redemption. Eliot is returning to a favorite trope from The Waste Land by hollowing out a religious iconography: the twinkling star, the stone idols, and elsewhere in the dream songs, the blackened river. Kauffer’s cul-de-lampe fills the empty space of the second page with images appropriate for the barren landscape. Where sections I and II in the Chapbook publication revolve around fluid and immaterial settings—“death’s dream kingdom,” “death’s other kingdom,” “between life and death”—the arid iconography of the final section provides appropriate material for a tailpiece illustration. That Eliot was prepared to add verses rather than be placed alongside another poet shows his intention for a closing section befitting either a blank space or a similarly barren tailpiece. Of QUIN / edward mcknight kauffer and the ariel poems 63 course, the periodical publication of poems or prose alongside corresponding graphic material is typically lost in their standardized reprinting in collections or anthologies. If the Chapbook printing of “Doris’s Dream Songs” shows this in miniature, Eliot’s subsequent Ariel Poems underscores how indirect deictic and ekphrastic gestures take on a new significance when read alongside Kauffer’s cover and frontispiece illustrations. 1925 was a seminal year for Kauffer. He received a retrospective solo exhibition of his poster designs by the Arts League of Service and moved further into the business of book illustration with a substantial commission from Nonesuch and Curwen presses. The Nonesuch Press illustrated edition of Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy was a new departure in several respects. It was Kauffer’s first illustrated book, commissioned by Francis Meynell. The project also afforded Curwen Press the opportunity to experiment with watercolor stenciling for several illustrations in forty specially printed vellum copies of the book, making the Nonesuch edition of Burton’s Anatomy the first large scale pochoir stencil operation in Britain. Kauffer therefore availed himself of Curwen’s stencil work from its inception, experimenting with opaque gouache and lighter stippled effects in stencil to create his varied and textured illustrations. Executing the pochoir technique by hand was immensely time consuming, and Harold Curwen employed a team of stencilers, all women from the Curwen bindery, to complete pochoir illustrations in watercolor or gouache. Paul Nash identified a “new aesthetic value for the ‘stencilled’ book” in the light of Curwen Press publications by Kauffer, Edward Bawden, Barnett Freedman, and others. Nash admired how “the colour for each picture is applied separately by hand” at Plaistow, “not impressed by a mechanical device.” There was also an admirable fidelity to original designs as the Curwen stencilers worked by hand. The stencilers used the same brushes as Kauffer in his originals and incorporated small sponges and toothbrushes to create the stippled and splattered effects (Nash, “The Stencil,” 113). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在20世纪20年代中期他在伦敦出版界取得成功之前,他在19世纪10年代至20年代的海报设计中出现了一种视觉平面的扁平化。从1915年起,英国交通管理局局长弗兰克·皮克委托考弗制作了一系列海报,描绘了伦敦各行政区和各种英国乡村景观,以及乘坐地铁进行冬季销售的广告。Kauffer的冬季促销海报以大胆的颜色抽象形状为特色,代表穿着点画效果外套的通勤者,并以对角线条纹代表雪和雨。他在海报设计和后来的插图中吸收了不同风格和流派的平面艺术,他的地下海报系列结合了奎因/爱德华·麦克奈特·考弗和日本彩色版画的ariel诗61、图卢兹·劳特雷克的海报设计和漩涡主义绘画(Haworth Booth,kauffer,27-28)。Fry特别欣赏冬季销售海报的实验设计和抽象形式,弗莱认为,公众在日常通勤中更容易接受这一点:“令人惊讶的是,人们在海报前表现出的敏捷和智慧,如果海报是画廊里的一张照片,就会被全面地宣称为难以理解。明智的心态显然会明显地减缓智慧。”据弗莱说,在地下围板上,购物者冒着天气的抽象形式很容易被识别出来。在高级艺术画廊之外,或者在考弗的地下画廊里,公众更容易接受抽象艺术和实验。海报广告的无处不在可能会让现代艺术家偷偷地进入一种新的风格,培养新的艺术欣赏模式。对考弗来说,这种抽象的简洁是现代海报设计的基本特征和要求。在《海报的艺术》(1924)中,他强调,由于广告的需求,海报的构图安排必然不同于“纯粹的绘画”。海报必须以可感知的即时性向观众传达一系列事实,这些事实也“在他的记忆中留下深刻印象”。最近的批评和策展关注充分巩固了考弗作为杰出“海报之王”的声誉(Lewis,Blasting and Bombardiering,212)。然而,他多产的插图作品和书籍封面设计却很少受到关注。考弗海报设计美学的元素,他对简单但令人难忘的符号和构图安排的坚持,与他作为插画家蓬勃发展的作品相辅相成。从20世纪20年代到30年代,他为伦敦一些最著名的出版商工作,包括Nonesuch出版社的Francis Meynell、Faber和Gwyer出版社的Victor Gollancz、Harold Curwen、Richard de la Mare,以及Hogarth出版社的Leonard和Virginia Woolf。同样,到了20世纪20年代中期,通过1922年《荒原》的成功,艾略特在布鲁姆斯伯里成为了一位公认的文化人物。从1924年到25年,《空心人》的第一部分到第四部分在《商业》、《标准》、《表盘》和哈罗德·蒙罗的《Miscelllany》中以各种组合的离散诗歌的形式出现。考弗对艾略特诗歌的第一幅小插图是在蒙罗的Chapbook杂志上为“多丽丝的梦之歌”创作的一幅受委托的cul de lampe或印刷装饰,这将成为《空心人》的第二和第三部分。艾略特坚持要为这首诗配一幅插图,因为他想自己画两页。他告诉蒙罗,“我特别不愿意和其他人出现在同一页上,如果你在灯下有任何困难,我会立即再写一页半的诗。”为了填满下半页,考弗画了一个小的黑白小插曲,暗指诗歌中的“仙人掌地”和“石头图像”。在这件作品中,我们可以看到考弗例证美学的关键特征:抽象和简化的使用,明暗的相互作用,至关重要的是,在艾略特困难的现代主义诗歌中,我们对文本细节有着敏锐的洞察力。正如Lorraine Janzen Kooistra所指出的,平面极简主义美学在英国高现代主义时期的许多出版商和小杂志中站稳了脚跟。一方面,形式主义者仅对单词的强调就为页面上62节的诗歌提供了信息,没有受到精心制作的文字装饰或更糟糕的商业广告的污染。另一方面,这一时期的先锋插画家寻求更巧妙和微妙的方式,将图形作品融入文本中,对文本和图像之间的关系做出微妙的解释。 在随后的几年里,考弗与库文印刷厂一起改进了他的工艺,并委托梅尔维尔的《贝尼托·塞雷诺》(1926年)、丹尼尔·笛福的《鲁滨逊漂流记》(1929年)、米格尔·德·塞万提斯的《堂吉诃德》(193年)
Illustrating Eliot: Edward McKnight Kauffer and the Ariel Poems
ion, and flattening the planes of perception emerged from his poster designs of the 1910s–20s prior to his success in the London publishing world from the mid1920s. From 1915, the British transport administrator Frank Pick commissioned a series of posters by Kauffer depicting London boroughs and various English countryside landscapes, as well as advertisements for winter sales reached by underground train. Kauffer’s Winter Sales posters feature abstracted shapes in bold colors to represent commuters in coats with stippled effects and diagonal stripes to represent snow and rain. He assimilated different styles and schools of graphic art into his poster designs and later illustrations, and his range of underground posters united the conventions QUIN / edward mcknight kauffer and the ariel poems 61 of Japanese color prints, Toulouse-Lautrec’s poster designs, and Vorticist painting (Haworth-Booth, Kauffer, 27–28). The Winter Sales posters were particularly admired by Fry for the experimental design and abstract forms, which Fry believed the public were more receptive to on their daily commute: “It is surprising, what alacrity and intelligence people can show in front of a poster which if it had been a picture in a gallery would have been roundly declared unintelligible. The judicious frame of mind evidently slows the wits very perceptibly.” According to Fry, the silhouetted, simplified, and abstracted forms of shoppers braving the weather were readily identified as such on the underground hoardings. Outside the galleries of high art, or indeed beneath them in Kauffer’s subterranean gallery, the public was more receptive to abstract art and experimentation. The ubiquity of poster adverts might allow the modern artist to smuggle in a new style and cultivate new modes of appreciating art. For Kauffer, this abstract simplicity was a fundamental property and requirement of modern poster design. In The Art of the Poster (1924), he stressed that the compositional arrangement of a poster was necessarily different from “pure painting” because of the demands of advertising. The poster must convey a set of facts to the spectator with a perceptible immediacy that also “remain[s] impressed upon his memory.” Kauffer’s reputation as the preeminent “poster-king” has been duly cemented by recent critical and curatorial attention (Lewis, Blasting and Bombardiering, 212). However, his prolific illustration work and book cover designs have received less attention. Elements of Kauffer’s poster design aesthetic, his insistence on symbols and compositional arrangements that were simple but memorable, proved complementary to his burgeoning work as an illustrator. From the 1920s–30s, he worked for some of the most prominent publishers in London, including Francis Meynell at Nonesuch Press, Victor Gollancz, Harold Curwen, Richard de la Mare at Faber and Gwyer, and Leonard and Virginia Woolf at Hogarth Press. Similarly, by the mid-1920s, Eliot was a well-established cultural figure in Bloomsbury through the success of The Waste Land in 1922, and from 1924–25, parts I to IV of The Hollow Men appeared as discrete poems in various combinations in Commerce, the Criterion, the Dial, and Harold Monro’s Chapbook Miscelllany. Kauffer’s first minor illustration of an Eliot poem was a commissioned cul-de-lampe, or typographic ornament, in Monro’s Chapbook magazine for “Doris’s Dream Songs,” which would become parts II and III of The Hollow Men. Eliot insisted on a tailpiece illustration to the poem because he wanted two pages to himself. He informed Monro that “as I particularly should not be willing to appear on the same page with anyone else, I will immediately produce another 1⁄2 page of verse if you have any difficulty with the cul-de-lampe.” To fill the bottom half of the page, Kauffer executed a small black-and-white vignette that alluded to the “cactus land” and “stone images” of the poem. In this tailpiece, we can see key features of Kauffer’s illustrative aesthetic: the use of abstraction and simplification, the interplay of light and shade, and crucially, a discerning eye for textual detail in Eliot’s difficult modernist verse. As Lorraine Janzen Kooistra has noted, an aesthetics of graphic minimalism took hold at many publishers and little magazines of the high modernist period in Britain. On the one hand, a formalist emphasis on the words alone informed the presentation M O D E R N I S M / m o d e r n i t y 62 of verse on the page, free from the contamination of elaborate textual ornaments or worse yet commercial advertisements. On the other hand, avant-garde illustrators of the period sought more ingenious and subtle means of incorporating graphic work into the text that drew nuanced interpretations of the relationship between text and image. Faith Binckes has noted that the status of illustration was elevated in the 1910s–20s as the art of the line and reproducible monotone art in little magazines was set in opposition to the elaborate and sometimes gaudy reproductions of paintings as full-color illustrations in Victorian books. In the 1890s, Walter Crane criticized the tradition of photomechanically reproduced paintings as book illustrations prevalent in the late nineteenth century as “simply pictures without frames,” bearing no formal relation to the type and layout of the printed page. Crane preferred linework or woodcut book decorations that shared the same processes of book design and printing as the type and letterpress. The black-and-white graphic austerity of modernist magazines like Rhythm and Blast was celebrated through a critical language of graphic art that emphasized rhythm, pattern, linear simplicity, and abstraction. Like Wadsworth, C. R. W. Nevinson, and William Nicholson, Kauffer’s linear poster art and black-andwhite linework was commended by critics for its tone and rhythm, terms formerly reserved for the art of painting, as we will see was the case in Fry’s discussion of Kauffer’s Burton illustrations. Marianne Moore surmised of Kauffer’s art at large that the “shadows are as arresting as objects” and the reserved “language of blacks and grays is color.” Part I of “Doris’s Dream Songs” printed in Monro’s Chapbook roughly translates into part II of The Hollow Men, recalling “death’s dream kingdom.” On the following page of the Chapbook, part III of the dream song marks a tonal shift with deictic gestures towards a series of desert images: This is the dead land This is cactus land Here the stone images Are raised, here they receive The supplication of a dead man’s hand Under the twinkle of a fading star. In the barren scene of Eliot’s poem, towering stones and cacti appear as totems in the “dead land,” receiving supplication and prayers without the promise of redemption. Eliot is returning to a favorite trope from The Waste Land by hollowing out a religious iconography: the twinkling star, the stone idols, and elsewhere in the dream songs, the blackened river. Kauffer’s cul-de-lampe fills the empty space of the second page with images appropriate for the barren landscape. Where sections I and II in the Chapbook publication revolve around fluid and immaterial settings—“death’s dream kingdom,” “death’s other kingdom,” “between life and death”—the arid iconography of the final section provides appropriate material for a tailpiece illustration. That Eliot was prepared to add verses rather than be placed alongside another poet shows his intention for a closing section befitting either a blank space or a similarly barren tailpiece. Of QUIN / edward mcknight kauffer and the ariel poems 63 course, the periodical publication of poems or prose alongside corresponding graphic material is typically lost in their standardized reprinting in collections or anthologies. If the Chapbook printing of “Doris’s Dream Songs” shows this in miniature, Eliot’s subsequent Ariel Poems underscores how indirect deictic and ekphrastic gestures take on a new significance when read alongside Kauffer’s cover and frontispiece illustrations. 1925 was a seminal year for Kauffer. He received a retrospective solo exhibition of his poster designs by the Arts League of Service and moved further into the business of book illustration with a substantial commission from Nonesuch and Curwen presses. The Nonesuch Press illustrated edition of Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy was a new departure in several respects. It was Kauffer’s first illustrated book, commissioned by Francis Meynell. The project also afforded Curwen Press the opportunity to experiment with watercolor stenciling for several illustrations in forty specially printed vellum copies of the book, making the Nonesuch edition of Burton’s Anatomy the first large scale pochoir stencil operation in Britain. Kauffer therefore availed himself of Curwen’s stencil work from its inception, experimenting with opaque gouache and lighter stippled effects in stencil to create his varied and textured illustrations. Executing the pochoir technique by hand was immensely time consuming, and Harold Curwen employed a team of stencilers, all women from the Curwen bindery, to complete pochoir illustrations in watercolor or gouache. Paul Nash identified a “new aesthetic value for the ‘stencilled’ book” in the light of Curwen Press publications by Kauffer, Edward Bawden, Barnett Freedman, and others. Nash admired how “the colour for each picture is applied separately by hand” at Plaistow, “not impressed by a mechanical device.” There was also an admirable fidelity to original designs as the Curwen stencilers worked by hand. The stencilers used the same brushes as Kauffer in his originals and incorporated small sponges and toothbrushes to create the stippled and splattered effects (Nash, “The Stencil,” 113). In subsequent years Kauffer refined his craft alongside the Curwen stencilers with commissions for Melville’s Benito Cereno (1926), Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1929), Miguel de Cervantes’s Don Quixote (193
期刊介绍:
Concentrating on the period extending roughly from 1860 to the present, Modernism/Modernity focuses on the methodological, archival, and theoretical exigencies particular to modernist studies. It encourages an interdisciplinary approach linking music, architecture, the visual arts, literature, and social and intellectual history. The journal"s broad scope fosters dialogue between social scientists and humanists about the history of modernism and its relations tomodernization. Each issue features a section of thematic essays as well as book reviews and a list of books received. Modernism/Modernity is now the official journal of the Modernist Studies Association.