Some people responded to my last essay,
the first to outline a few of the influencers on my work.
To continue, this week I’ll concentrate on Ernst Fischer (1899 – 1972).
Fischer held “that art is not some optional form of entertainment,
a pleasant luxury of civilised life,
but an essential or constitutive part of human consciousness
and social being.”
from an article THE NECESSITY OF ART: A MARXIST APPROACH
by Dominic AlexanderFischer is best known in the West for this book: published in 1959.
He became a mentor to the English novelist, essayist, film-maker and painter,
John Berger, who, with Albert Camus, the French philosopher,
novelist and essayist, are my two greatest influencers
…more about them in the near future.Fischer, not unlike Marcuse (whom I wrote about in the previous essay),
stood against the work-a-day closed-minded trite use of art
by the Communist party and by Marxists.
He understood that progressive art
would always be about something more than simply feeding a propaganda machine with its narrow concentration
on building the power of the demagogue or the party or the state.
Perhaps he understood that violent revolution replaces one gain of psychopaths
with another.He wrote,
“Art is necessary in order that man [people]
should be able to recognize and change the world.
But art is also necessary by virtue of the magic inherent in it”.It was his recognition of both the magical element of aesthetics and creativity
and the need to respond to the problems of society
that helped me to understand I wasn’t compromising my social commitments
by accepting that both were a viable part of creative work.When I was a young photographer trying to understand the world,
to do the right thing with my images
and to not succumb to the pressures I came into conflict with,
whether from art directors and editors on various magazines,
or socialists in left wing political parties.The right wing establishment
always wanted to impose on my storytelling their attitudes
and their publisher’s politics.
This focused me on the conflict between
those paying me
and those trusting and allowing me into their lives.
Of course it was the latter I choose and of course it led to more conflicts.
Those on the left wanted everything reduced
to simplistic visual and spoken language.
No subtlety,
no room for ideas,
only shouting headlines and vulgar texts
which made the popular gutter press seem intelligent.I was searching for help
looking for wisdom from others,
trying to find ways to survive financially,
My only solace was in reading these writers I’m describing to you,
to find ways to see if others
had the same traumatic emotional and intellectual life in creativity,
to figure out what was, in the short and long term both sensible and moral.
It eventually became painfully clear that speaking truth to power
would never allow me to find peace within the system
unless I accepted that I would not be able to criticise the status quo.Reissued with an introduction by John Berger
THE NECESSITY OF ART is a beautifully written mediation on art’s importance
in seeing and understanding our world.
Fischer clarified for me the relationship between my creative imagination
and the surrounding social reality.He understood that artists needed to engage with society,
that they had no choice if they wished to have an audience.
He clearly rejected hyper-consumerism,
but he maintained an optimistic humanism.Today, years after having encountered his writing directly
and since having read almost everything published
by Fischer’s intellectual son, John Berger,
I have cultured a broader, more tolerant humanism.
None the less, I feel compromised by the dark moment we are in
with social democracy having given way
to neoliberal culture, politics and economics,
with increasing inequality between rich and poor,
with oil and gas corporations unstoppable in their compulsive search
for greenhouse gas creating fuels,
with fascism and its accompanying racism, nationalism
and therefore, violence and chaos.What suited me was that within Fischer’s Marxism
there was a rejection of Soviet communism
and an embrace of humanism.
His writing taught me to back away from accepting ideas, hopes and dreams
that were alien to me,
and that I should be embracing my own instinctual humanity.Thinking of art and artists, one of my documentaries
is about the wonderful contemporary artists, Ricky Romain,
whose work is both mysteriously beautiful and apposite about our time;
it is exemplary of Fischer’s view of the true nature of art.
You can view the 28 minute film for free, here.
thank you Gareth...kind words.
Ever since I first saw it, I have loved the simplicity of the Knife, Salt and Onion picture.
Thanks Bob for reacquainting me with it, and, perhaps we may see some more of your atmospheric food shots.