Saturday, 7 February 2015

THE FACES OF MODIGLIANI: IDENTITY POLITICS UNDER FASCISM

The Faces of Modigliani: Identity Politics under Fascism. 
Klein, M. & Brown, E, (2004) in M. Klein (ed.), Modigliani: beyond the myth.  New York / New Haven Conn.: Jewish Museum. pp25-42.     
This is a personal summary of the paper ‘The Faces of Modigliani: Identity Politics under Fascism’ by Klein, M. & Brown, E. (2004) in M. Klein (ed.), Modigliani: beyond the myth.  New York / New Haven Conn.: Jewish Museum. pp25-42.    
Who is defined as “European”?
Despite their unvarying style, Amedeo Modigliani’s portraits of faces do show variety.  In the time of Modigliani, Montparnasse was a centre of modernist art and a home for émigrés: the portraits that he painted here effectively ask ‘Who is defined as “European” in the years around the First World War?’
Modigliani’s style cannot easily be defined.  Characteristics of his portrait style include: the influence of African sculpture; emphasis on qualities of passivity and modesty; and styles of imagery that originate more from Eastern Europe and the Orient than from Western Europe and which define the ‘otherness’ of Modigliani’s subject matter.
A modernist
Modigliani was born an Italian Sephardic Jew. 
In Paris Modigliani’s origin distinguished him from Eastern European Jews.  And to be Italian in Paris was to embody a land that had been snubbed diplomatically as a backward nation at the dangerous southern margin of European civilisation.  Modigliani’s choice of Italian women as models reinforced Parisians’ preconceived notions of Italian indolence.  
Modigliani was, however, from Livorno, in Tuscany, the birthplace of Renaissance art, and this, together with his ‘aristocratic bearing’, gave him an air cultural authenticity in Paris.  Conversely, Modigliani’s success in Paris made him a celebrated artist in Italy. 
Modigliani died before the Fascist revolution of Benito Mussolini: after this revolution Modigliani’s legacy was fought over as Italian identity was itself redefined. 
Livorno was well-established as a cosmopolitan city in which Jews had long played an integral part.  A greater dichotomy in Modigliani in the 1920s was his role primarily as a Tuscan, rather than as an Italian. 
The Futurists hung works by Modigliani in the Italian section of the Exposition Internationale d’Art Moderne in Geneva in 1920, and in doing this they were the first to ‘claim Modigliani for the patriotic cause’.  Modigliani was first hung publically in Italy in 1922 in Venice.  Also included in this show – the XIII Bienalle – were African sculptures.  
Modigliani’s work was not received well, but this was apparently not on the basis of Modigliani’s Jewishness or on his style’s association with ‘l’arte negra’: he was decried for being a modernist. 
Self-discovery in Bohemian Paris
In 1927 Giovanni Scheiwiller produced the first Italian monograph on Modigliani: this is the origin of the ‘standard interpretation of Modigliani’s experience abroad’: of self-discovery in Bohemian Paris; of Modigliani’s ‘italianita’ being revealed in the artist’s elegance of style; and the ‘humility’ of his portraits of women being in the line of the old masters’ depictions of the Madonna. 
Modigliani’s Jewishness was not mentioned by Scheiwiller.  Scheiwiller’s ‘interpretation’ of the decadence of Modigliani’s life and his restlessness is ‘displaced onto the contemporary Parisian environment’.
Positive stereotypes of Jewish religion and culture
It was in 1929 that Lamberto Vitali gave an account of Modigliani’s ‘racial qualities’: in Modigliani the qualities of the Italian and the Jewish were combined and both were displayed to good effect.  But Vitali is writing about himself and his own Italian Jewish identity as much as about Modigliani.  
Vitali was nevertheless the first Italian critic to describe positive stereotypes of Jewish religion and culture: the eroticism of Modigliani’s nudes was ‘transfigured into chaste emotion’; and Modigliani’s sensuality drew on Judaism’s ancient worship of women ‘with the most ancient and beautiful of hymns’. And Vitali found that Modigliani’s draughtsmanship echoed that of the 14th Century Tuscan Christian artist Simone Martini. 
Thus, Modigliani embodied Jewish and Christian, and ancient and modern.
1930: a climate of intensified chauvinism
The 1930 Venice Biennale showed a large number of Modigliani’s works.  The Italian businessman Riccardo Gualino provided many of the Modiglianis for the Biennale.  Gualino was advised in his purchasing of art by Lionello Venturi who believed that Cezanne epitomised modern art. 
Venturi championed Modigliani as a model for Italian artists.  Marinetti – the leader of the Futurists – took issue with Venturi, wanting to promote Futurism as the ideal of modern Italian art.  Gualino favoured the Turin school known as the Gruppo dei Sei in preference to the Futurists: he gave them access to his Modiglianis. Venturi championed Modigliani as the ‘outsider of the art world’ who had remained open to any and all influences without allegiance to any programme or movement. 
The 1930 Venice Biennale was the first in which its administration intended its content to promote Fascist values.  Consequently artists aspiring to the Biennale tended to work from classical or Latin sources.  Thus the Modiglianis in the exhibition contrasted with ‘this climate of intensified chauvinism’. 
Paradoxically it was Antonio Maraini – the new secretary general of the Venice Biennale – who then commissioned a Modigliani retrospective exhibition from Venturi, also in 1930.  Venturi tended to be anti-Fascist; the location for the retrospective was to be Turin – also anti-Fascist.  Gualino was not anti-Fascist, but he was not a willing servant of Mussolini.   At the Venice Biennale Venturi championed Modigliani as a model Italian: open-minded, open to influences across national boundaries, and to be preferred to Italians who find fault in anything non-Italian.  Thus the Modigliani retrospective was politically loaded.  
Thirty seven Modigliani portraits and one landscape were in the show.  Critics applauded Venturi’s endeavour in curating the show, but they cared little for the show’s ‘European perspective’.  There was anti-Semitism in criticism of the show, and this was presented as slurs on, amongst other things: Modigliani’s eroticism; Jewish art dealers who handled Modigliani’s works; Eastern European Jewish artists in Paris; and Modigliani’s ‘melancholic disposition’.
The wandering Jew
A powerful perception ‘that was present in European fin-de-siècle Europe’ was that of the “wandering Jew”. 
It was held that the Jewish diaspora was rootless and thus unable to develop a distinctive Jewish artistic culture.  Moreover, it was held that this diaspora was responsible for disseminating modernism.  Modigliani was understood and accepted as Italian because Jews had ‘lived on the peninsula for two thousand years’, but when ‘in exile’ in Paris, Modigliani had become an émigré Jew as much as an Italian yearning for home. 
The stereotypes of Jewishness were applied to Modigliani and his life and death in Paris: he had assimilated the modern art around him because Jews had no artistic culture of their own, and yet as a Tuscan he had drawn on his Renaissance heritage, thus proving his genius. 
The influential critic – and advisor to Mussolini – Margherita Sarfatti – a Jew – argued that Zionism was a threat to Italy and its Jews.  Sarfatti ignored Modigliani’s Jewishness and regarded him as having been an ambassador of Tuscany abroad.  It was held that Modigliani had nothing in common with the works of his fellow Jews in Paris: Marc Chagall, the abstractionist and the disturbing Chaim Soutine.
Modigliani’s portraits
Modigliani’s portraits were received as modernist versions of the old masters.  The nudes were compared with Botticelli; the faces of demure women were compared with those of Madonnas and other saints and virgins.  ‘Stereotypes of Jewish suffering’ merged with ‘Christian misericorda’.  This was symbolic of the Vatican’s recently-made concordat with the new Fascist government.   
The narrative of Modigliani’s life was given overt Christian symbolism: his time in Paris was a ‘road to Calvary’; Modigliani was a ‘hermit of beauty’ who sought neither fame nor disciples; ‘the diasporic Jew and the patriotic Italian came together in this “martyr for art”’.  Alberto Savinio asserted that ‘the destiny of all “good” Jews is to relive the tragedy of Christ – to be Christianised’. 
Fascism and duplicity
Subsequent to the 1930 retrospective exhibition, the proponents of Modigliani began to suffer under Fascism.  Venturi fled to Paris.  Gualino was imprisoned.  Carlo Levi – leader of the Gruppo dei Sei - was exiled.  Gualino’s collection of Modiglianis went to private collectors but none entered a national museum: one was acquired by a gallery in Berlin and became subject to the Nazis’ degenerate art collection. 
In his book of 1928 ‘Kunst und Rasse’, Paul Schultze-Naumberg had described Modigliani’s work ‘Ragazza’ as typifying the ‘biological degeneracy of modern art’.  Schultze-Naumberg sought to show the similarity of ‘Ragazza’ with photographs of ‘the mentally and physically “diseased”’.  Thus modern art was held to be ‘sick’.
Klein and Brown show the duplicity of the Fascist regime in the way in which it contributed eleven Modiglianis to an exhibition of modern Italian art in Paris in 1935, though the eleven works were selected for not depicting Italian people. 
After 1938 the intensity of discourse in this ‘culture war’ increased with the introduction of racial laws.  An Italian anti-degenerate art campaign sought out principally French art, ‘living Italian modernists’, ‘geometric abstractionists’ and ‘Rationalist architects’.
Simultaneously, avant-garde Italian artists defended modernism from the charge of Jewishness.  Udo Bernasconi had contributed to a 1927 published work by Scheiwiller which contained first-hand reminiscences of Modigliani, but now Bernasconi initially defended Modigliani’s style, but then described his ‘caricatural style’ as ‘a product of Modigliani’s “Israelite blood”’.
Even so, during the Second World War Modiglianis remained in private collections and there is evidence that his work was not universally reviled by the Fascists – because of his great international reputation.
A ‘collective portrait of the socially marginal’: the ‘European tribe’
Modigliani shows the complexity of the dynamics of negative Jewish stereotyping. 
Modigliani’s ‘otherness’ was a changeable matter, depending on context. 
There is no way of knowing if Modigliani felt ‘other’. 
There is no evidence that explains his affinity for ‘l’arte negra’. 
Klein and Brown argue that the strongest evidence lies in Modigliani’s manner of painting the eyes of a portrait: these are typically blank, in an African ‘non gaze’.  Thus, Modigliani’s faces suppress emotion: each becomes a part of the ‘collective portrait of the socially marginal’. 

Klein and Brown argue that Modigliani painted the ‘European tribe’ in a challenge to the monolithic Christian perception of Europe.  

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