Fumism
Fumism ou fumisme (French: fumisme from the French: fumée, smoke), is a conditionally decadent movement in Parisian art that existed from the late 1870s to the first quarter of the 20th century. Fumism can be characterized as ″the art of blowing smoke in your eyes″ — practically, it is the same as Dadaism, but only forty years earlier.[1] This generalized aesthetic-philosophical term became widespread in French culture in the late 19th and early 20th centuries thanks to Émile Goudeau, a poet, writer, finance ministry official, and founder of the so-called ″Hydropath Society″. The founders and ideological inspirers of the movement were the same Émile Goudeau, as well as two permanent troublemakers: Arthur Sapeck (real name — Eugène Bataille) and Alphonse Allais.[2]: XVIII
On the other hand, “fumists” (fumists or supporters of “fumism”) were called not only artists and actors who were part of a specific aesthetic movement, but also much more broadly: in general, people who were frivolous, pretentious, throwing dust in the eyes and creating works in avant-garde styles (including the Fauvists, by consonance).[3]
″The Society of Hydropaths″, the Beginning of Fumism
[edit]In October 1878, the poet and finance ministry official Émile Goudeau organized a “closed” circle (or artistic club) called the “Society of Hydropaths”,[4] where poets, writers, and playwrights gathered to drink heavily and eat a little, and in the meantime, show each other poems, essays, sketches, monologues, and generally anything that could be “showed.” Sharp verbal duels regularly took place between the hydropaths, where they could show off their wit, quick reactions, or wordplay.
Some time later, more precisely in February 1879, on the initiative of the founder of the club (the same Emile Goudot) and under his editorship, a newspaper of the same name, ″Hydropat″, was founded. Later the name was changed to ″Hydropats″, and then the newspaper received its last name ″All Paris″ — and soon ceased to exist. During the first year (1879-1880), thirty-one issues of the newspaper were published.
At the initial stage, the composer Georges Fragerolle played a major role in the emergence of the fumists in place of the hydropaths. In 1879 he joined the Hydropathic literary club. On 12 May 1880 he published an article on ″Fumisme″.[5] ″Fumisme″ is a system of elaborate hoaxes used to expose hypocrites and deflate the pompous.[6] It was often practiced by the Hydropathes.[7] According to Fragerolle, fumisme
is to wit what operetta is to opéra-bouffe, caricature to cartoon, prunes to castor oil. To be considered a wit, it is sometimes enough to be an ass in a lion's skin; to be a good fumiste, it is often required to be a lion in an ass's skin. In the former case, the effect is direct, in the latter it is once, twice, often ten times reflected.[7]
The Fumist manifesto, written by Fragerolle, contained the main thesis, which could be considered the motto of this movement: «The arts must become fumism <turn into smoke>, or they will not exist».[2]: XVIII
Émile Goudeau′s ″Hydropathic Club″ (where they treated themselves with fiery absinthe rather than water) existed for almost three years. The last meeting took place in Montmartre in 1881. At the same time, Rodolphe Salis opened his famous artistic café ″Le Chat Noir″, which partially absorbed and then replaced the former amorphous Hydropaths.[8]
The ideas of the early hydropathists were continued by the historic exhibitions of the Arts Incohérents by Jules Lévy , the first of which took place in October 1882. Many hydropathists and fumists, including Alphonse Allais and Arthur Sapeck , showed their fumist discoveries (painting, music and theatre) at these exhibitions, which anticipated Minimalism, Dadaism and Suprematism by decades.[1]
Name and meaning
[edit]The playful term ″fumism″, casually dropped by Émile Goudeau and then briskly picked up by Sapek and Alphonse Allais, grew out of the noun French: fumée — smoke. It is a collective philosophical term denoting a person's attitude to the world, to himself, and also to art as a type of human activity. The new attitude was expressed in the deliberate ridicule and mockery of everything and everyone without any restrictions or prohibitions, the shaming of everyday stupidity and bourgeois consciousness. The more incomprehensible and absurd, the stronger the bewilderment, the better and higher the result — such was the invisible motto of the fumists. Thus, having begun its formation with moderate ″hydropathy″ (hydrotherapy), a group of French writers, and later artists and even composers, found their ideological justification and support on the basis of total and all-pervading fumée, or — smoke.
Meanwhile, the play on words prevailed here: in French, the word fumée, its derivatives, and similar-sounding ones have more meanings: from smoke and smoking itself, to stove-setters, chimney sweeps, chatterboxes, liars, empty talkers, and even pure manure.
Since the ″Hydropathic Society″ ceased to exist in the stuffy atmosphere of the club, its art of blowing smoke and dust in the eyes, playing practical jokes and mockery spread throughout Paris and then further afield in the form of fumism. For the fumists, the everyday practice of shocking or ″mocking the stupidity of the common man″ was of great importance. In much the same way, in the 1920s, a group of surrealists smashed exhibitions, started fights at performances and constantly disturbed public order. The fumists were not as noisy, but in general they behaved in much the same way.[9]: 26–27
Fumism emerged as smoke from the ″Hydropathic Society″ founded by the civil servant and poet Émile Goudeau. By chance (and Emile Goudot himself), Arthur Sapek and Alphonse Allais were named (appointed) as the ideological leaders of Fumism.[2]: XVIII The greatest oral contribution to the initial development of Fumism was made by Arthur Sapeck , a caricaturist, wit, mystifier, and later a government official in the field of mass spectacles and entertainment. Some of his works seem almost direct quotations from the ″Dadaist artists″, in particular, from Marcel Duchamp (for example, ″L.H.O.O.Q.″, 1919), with the only amendment that they appeared almost four decades earlier.[1]
After Sapek's departure (first to government service, and then from life altogether), the main successor of the traditions of Fumism was the ″chief of the Fumists″ Alphonse Allais, an eccentric, writer, black humorist and journalist.[10] Thanks to the stories and newspaper chronicles of Allais, the purely oral artifacts of the initial period of Fumism have been preserved as facts of history, and partly as results of a purely literary level. And not only literary, but also pictorial,[9]: 32–34 and even musical.[9]: 35 Evidence (and the crowning glory) of Alphonse Allais's first literary successes was the January 1880 issue of the newspaper ″Hydropat″ entirely dedicated to him, with a caricature (not by Sapeck) on the entire cover.[1]
Already in the first year of Fumism, Paul Vivien wrote in his “leading” article:[11]
...Alphonse Allais, head of the Fumist School, is one of the most famous and beloved characters of the Latin Quarter, where he has long been known for his wonderful gaiety and sharp wit...[2]: XVII
After the early death of Alphonse Allais, his close friend, the composer Erik Satie, became his informal heir and most prominent successor to Fumism.[9]: 37 He, along with the artist and poet George Auriol, inevitably became the link between Fumism and the emerging Dadaism. The young representatives of Dada, Tristan Tzara and Francis Picabia, recognized him as a Dadaist from the very first word and accepted him as one of their own. As for the upcoming surrealism (a movement that many Dadaists joined), even the term itself appeared in 1917 in the manifesto “New Spirit” – as a new genre definition for Eric Satie’s ballet “Parade”.[12]: 323
The only “heir” of fumism in Russia was declared to be the famous “king of eccentricity” and “vomiting chansonnier” Mikhail Savoyarov in the 1910s. As a teenager, having experienced the influence of some Parisian fumists and the Russian obscene poet Pyotr Schumacher in the 1890s, Savoyarov later, as a tribute of respect and gratitude, called his “unbridled” concerts “smoky fonforisms” or “fanfaronnades”.[13]: 57–58
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See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Yuri Khanon: «Dada before Dada», Chapter: «..Fumists..» (in Russian) Archived 2022-04-11 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d Alphonse Allais. (biographie par François Caradec). «Œuvres anthumes». — Paris, Robert Laffont Edition S.A., 1989. — 682 p.
- ^ N.K. Roerich. Diary pages. In three volumes. Volume 3. — Moscow: International Centre of the Roerichs, 1996.
- ^ The ″Hydropathic Club″, in full accordance with the basic principles of fumism, had no more to do with real, ″serious″ hydropathy (hydrotherapy) than fumists had to do with cleaning chimneys.
- ^ Fragerolle, G. (12 May 1880). "Le Fumisme". L'Hydropathe. 2 (8): 2–3.
- ^ Harding 2000, p. 17.
- ^ a b Harding 2000, p. 18.
- ^ Dousteyssier-Khoze, Catherine. Fumisme: le rire jaune du Chat Noir. Durham Modern Languages Series. — Durham: C. Dousteyssier-Khoze, & P. Scott, 12001.
- ^ a b c d Yuri Khanon. ″Alphonse, Who Wasn’t″. (or a book in the penultimate sense of the word). — Saint Petersburg: Center of Middle Music & Faces of Russia, 2013. — 544 p. (in Russian)
- ^ Alphonse Allais. Fumisme. Traduccio de Jean Casas. — Barcelona. Ediciones l'Albí. 2010. (in Catalan)
- ^ Paul Vivien. From the leading article of the magazine ″Hydropat″: January 28, 1880.
- ^ Erik Satie, Yuri Khanon. «Antedate memories». — St. Petersburg: Center for Middle Music and Faces of Russia, 2010.
- ^ Yuri Khanon, Mikhail Savoyarov. «Favorites from abusive (in Russian) Archived 2019-03-30 at the Wayback Machine». — St. Petersburg: Center of Middle Music, 2017. — 356 p.
Sources
[edit]- Harding, James Martin (2000). Contours of the Theatrical Avant-Garde: Performance and Textuality. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-06727-5. Retrieved 2013-06-05.
External links
[edit]- A Bohème, fumisme et ironie: Lettres & Arts (in French)
- Grey Art Museum, New York University
- fumisme – Michigan Quarterly Review
- Tremblay, Charles-Étienne Émergence du fumisme dans la production d'un nouvel esprit littéraire (in French)