sehepunkte 24 (2024), Nr. 6

Esther Levinger: Constructivism in Central Europe

Is there a common movement that might be identified as a Central European avant-garde, or are art movements in the region so disparate that it is difficult to find a common denominator? Esther Levinger poses this question in her introduction. She suggests that artists in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland shared common concerns about new directions in art that position Central Europe as a unified cultural space even though artists from the region "rarely recognized one another as preferred interlocutors". (2) In relation to Constructivism, Levinger finds parallels in artists' fascination with non-objective art and its perceived potential to represent art for a new society in the first decades of the twentieth century. The author's focus is on artists in Warsaw (Katarzyna Kobro, Teresa Żarnower, Władysław Strzemiński, and Mieczysław Szcuka), Prague, and Brno (Karel Teige and Jaroslav Svrčeck), and Hungarian émigré artists (Lajos Kassák, Sándor Bortnyik, and Lászlo Moholy-Nagy). Assessing typographic works, paintings, and architectural drawings, Levinger argues that Central European artists adopted highly dynamic interpretations of Constructivism in their work and, despite their leftist political convictions, rejected Socialist Realism "to proclaim that human life and freedom are more important than even the most appealing theory". (8)

The book is divided into four chapters with color illustrations that each have a thematic focus defined in terms of Russian Constructivism's offshoots in Central Europe. They include the duality of Teige's Poetism and Constructivism, Strzemiński's Unism, and Kassák's Picture Architecture. An appendix also includes translations from Hungarian and Polish of three longer source texts, adding to the extensive referencing of textual primary sources throughout the volume and its underlining of the importance of printed matter for avant-gardists discussing and circulating their ideas. Levinger draws out similarities and differences in the artists' theoretical writings as well as their visual works. Ultimately, her analysis confirms that artists hardly adopted constructivism in any uniform way in their attempts to find a suitable form of representation for a utopian (socialist) future. Rather, each group - each artist even - selected the aspects of Constructivism that seemed to best represent their ideal vision of such a future. This process of adaptation most clearly comes to the fore in the first chapter, in which the author addresses the fact that artists rarely encountered Russian Constructivism first hand. Rather, they garnered information from writers such as Ilya Ehrenburg and the German critic Adolf Behne. Essentially, the "doubly mediated" (14) reception of Constructivism in Central Europe led to a productive misinterpretation of it that allowed avant-garde artists in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary (or in Viennese exile) to come to their own conclusions about this new art, unified by a common vision of the potential for non-objective work to forge an art for the masses in line with the artist's personal brands of political idealism. Moving between close visual and textual analysis, Levinger gives insight into the discussions taking place between Uitz and Kassák, for example, and looks at the different outcomes of abstract compositions in the work of Strzemiński and Henryk Stażewski.

Producing a book encompassing such diverse debates and artworks must have been no small challenge. This is especially true given that there were often no tangible connections between the artist groups in focus here, as the author points out at the outset: they are linked, in simple terms, by having similar political outlooks and having taken inspiration from Constructivism, which they perceived as a movement closely linked to socialist ideals. As such, the book is primarily concerned with ways in which reinterpretations of Constructivism informed artistic production in Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia, and it focuses exclusively on the avant-garde. Although the geographic scope of the book is remarkably wide, given that Central Europe's avant-gardes were still rarely directly linked to one another, the actual question of Constructivism's variability turns out to be much more narrowly focused on a highly select group of theorists and artists. Indeed, the book contains few insights that delve beyond well-established figures.

Indeed, given that Levinger implicitly aims to challenge misconceptions about centers (in this case Moscow) and peripheries (Central Europe) in art history, it is surprising that the book does not touch on the more recent debates situating Central European art in a wider context. References to the work of scholars who have revisited the framing of Central European art in the years since Steven Mansbach's Modern Art in Eastern Europe (1999) and Timothy Benson's Central European Avant-Gardes (2002) - including Piotr Piotrowski, Beáta Hock, Jonathan Owen, Klara Kemp-Welch, and Matthew Rampley - would have helped to situate the book in the crucial debates about where, and how, the avant-garde positioned itself within Central Europe and in broader geographical contexts. [1] The book's bypassing of challenges to the exclusive framing of Central European avant-garde groups such as Devětsil, the Má circle, and the Blok group is also striking. While it is undoubtedly necessary to delimit material in a project spanning barely connected groups in three countries, the question remains as to what wider impact the Constructivist ideas these artists developed had on their broader environment. And, more importantly still, the question persists of how this revisiting of Constructivism in the region can challenge, rather than affirm, established narratives.

In this sense, the book offers a detailed reconsideration of Constructivism in Central Europe with an astonishing use of primary sources in different languages - a remarkable achievement in itself given that they have all been put together by a single author. However, the book continues to follow the established paradigm of writing the history of the avant-garde as an exclusive and almost exclusively male group of artists and its close focus leaves little room for grounding the analysis in the social and political realities of the day. The book thus primarily functions on a theoretical level as a history of ideas from different avant-garde groups in the region. As it makes little reference to more recent critical debates about art history in the region, Constructivism in Central Europe represents an impressive overview of constructivist ideas, but its readers will need extensive knowledge to succeed in situating these debates within a wider critical framework.


Note:

[1] Beáta Hock / Jonathan Owen et al. (eds.): A Reader in East-Central-European Modernism 1918-1956, London 2019; Piotr Piotrowski: On the Spatial Turn, or Horizontal Art History, in: Umeni/Art 56 (2008), 5, 378-383; Matthew Rampley: Networks, Horizons, Centres and Hierarchies: On the Challenges of Writing on Modernism in Central Europe, in: Umění/Art 69 (2021), 2, 145-162.

Rezension über:

Esther Levinger: Constructivism in Central Europe. Painting, Typography, Photomontage, Leiden / Boston: Brill 2022, XI + 370 S., ISBN 978-90-04-50555-1, EUR 163,71

Rezension von:
Julia Secklehner
Masaryk-Universität, Brno
Empfohlene Zitierweise:
Julia Secklehner: Rezension von: Esther Levinger: Constructivism in Central Europe. Painting, Typography, Photomontage, Leiden / Boston: Brill 2022, in: sehepunkte 24 (2024), Nr. 6 [15.06.2024], URL: https://www.sehepunkte.de/2024/06/39285.html


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