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Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Guernica 馃枌Story of a Painting馃帹 that Fought Fascism

Guernica
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The Story of a Painting
That Fought Fascism
By Fiona Macdonald * 6 February 2017


Opening during the Spanish Civil War, the 1937 Paris Exhibition allowed artists to speak out against brutality. Fiona Macdonald looks at a moment when paintings became propaganda.

On 26 April 1937, Nazi German and Italian bombers attacked the Basque city of Guernica. Over the course of three hours, they destroyed three-quarters of the ancient town, killing and wounding hundreds. The raid was “unparalleled in military history”, according to reports at the time – and it inspired one of the most famous anti-war paintings in history. A new exhibition staged in London by Barcelona’s Mayoral Gallery honours a group of artists who responded to the atrocities of the Spanish Civil War.

These artists were brought together by the 1937 Paris Exhibition, which opened less than a month after the bombing and just 10 months after the Civil War began. The Exhibition is usually remembered for the competing bluster of two nations: Germany, with its monumental granite tower topped with a giant eagle and swastika, and the Soviet Union, whose marble-clad structure was capped by an even bigger statue of two figures clutching a hammer and a sickle. Yet it also played host to a humbler project that has outlasted either monolith. Mayoral’s exhibition commemorates the 80th anniversary of the Spanish pavilion, seen by the Second Spanish Republic as a way of revealing General Franco’s cruelty to the rest of the world against a backdrop of rising authoritarianism.

Its ambitions were far removed from Nazi and Soviet architectural one-upmanship. As Europe moved towards war, the situation in Spain took on significance around the world. It became a battleground for the forces of Fascism and Communism and inspired new works from some of the greatest artists of the time. Pablo Picasso, Julio Gonz谩lez, Joan Mir贸, Alexander Calder, Alberto S谩nchez, and Jos茅 Guti茅rrez Solan were all shown in the Spanish pavilion.

Inspired by the bombing of the Basque city, Picasso’s mural Guernica is one of the most famous anti-war paintings in history (Credit: Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sof铆a)
Picasso was commissioned to create a mural for the pavilion, and had started on a series of anti-Nationalist images called Dream and Lie of Franco earlier in 1937. After reading reports of the attack on Guernica by Franco’s allies, he began work on a painting that would come to symbolise the wider fight against Fascism. According to the art historian Fernando Mart铆n Mart铆n, “For the first time in the contemporary history of war, a town and its civilian population had been annihilated both as a scare tactic and a way of testing the war machine.” He says this was the “instant Picasso knew what would be the subject of his mural for the pavilion.”

In Guernica, I clearly express my abhorrence of the military caste which has sunk Spain in an ocean of pain and death – Pablo Picasso 

His painting, Guernica, is not on display at Mayoral (it is exhibited at Madrid’s Reina Sof铆a Museum) – but there are insights into its creation, including photographs taken by Picasso’s girlfriend at the time, Dora Maar. The mural took him just over a month to complete. 

While painting, to combat rumours that he supported the Nationalists, Picasso issued a statement: 
“In the panel on which I am working, which I shall call Guernica, and in all my recent works of art, I clearly express my abhorrence of the military caste which has sunk Spain in an ocean of pain and death”.


Political canvas
The artists creating pieces for the pavilion were explicit in their aims. Mayoral’s exhibition curator Juan Manuel Bonet says that “all the major works at the pavilion were fruits of a commission. The special thing about this commission was that it was not intended to be a political commission; the artists took it upon themselves to react in such a way.”
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Designed as a stamp to aid the Republican Government, Help Spain (Aidez L'Espagne) was one of Mir贸’s first political works  
(Credit: Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sof铆a)

It was a new outlook for some of them, says Bonet. “Before 1936, neither Picasso nor Mir贸 were very political; but the Spanish Civil War changed this.” According to him, 1937’s Dream and Lie of Franco by Picasso and Aidez l’Espagne (Help Spain) by Mir贸 are the artists’ first overtly political works. “Later on in their careers, Picasso joined the French Communist Party in 1944 and Mir贸 continued to be very active against Franco’s regime into and during the 1960s and ‘70s.”

The American sculptor Alexander Calder’s contribution to the pavilion was also a piece of propaganda. A supporter of the Republican cause and great friend of Mir贸, Calder was initially refused permission to create an artwork because he wasn’t Spanish, but the organizers relented after a marble fountain from Spain had to be repurposed. It was filled with mercury that was poured through a series of sculptures created by Calder until it reached a mobile labelled ‘Almad茅n’.

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The Mercury Fountain by Alexander Calder referenced a Republican stronghold famous for its mercury mines

The word resonated with Republicans. It was the name of a stronghold that held out against an offensive by Franco’s troops in March 1937, famous for its deposits of mercury, an element valued for its use in manufacturing weapons. Calder’s piece, The Mercury Fountain, doubled as a symbol for Republican resistance. “Nothing in the pavilion was free from intention,” writes Mart铆n.


Guernica was not a picture but graffiti, though graffiti done by a genius – Jos茅 Bergam铆n

The exhibition has been put together with Joan Punyet Mir贸, historian and grandson of Joan. It includes a reconstruction of his grandfather’s El Segador (The Reaper) – a mural painted onto construction material in situ which was then lost or destroyed after the pavilion was dismantled. Showing a Catalan peasant with a huge misshapen head, it was a cry of outrage at the events in Spain. “Of course I intended it as a protest,” said Mir贸. “The Catalan peasant is a symbol of the strong, the independent, the resistant.”


Pop-up propaganda
Both The Reaper and Guernica were created as propaganda, in the manner of Soviet agitprop – “ephemeral art based on propaganda and agitation for a political cause aimed at stirring up the masses”, writes Joan Punyet Mir贸, arguing that the murals “looked like huge political propaganda posters”. The poet Jos茅 Bergam铆n commented that “Guernica was not a picture but graffiti, though graffiti done by a genius”.

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Joan Mir贸 painting El Segador (The Reaper), a mural intended as an ephemeral work of propaganda, according to his grandson 
 Credit: Successi贸 Mir贸 Archives/Courtesy of Mayoral)

Painted on poor quality canvas, Guernica could easily have been destroyed as well. According to Punyet Mir贸, “Neither of them chose a tough, hard-wearing support, for they knew in advance that these were ephemeral works, designed to cause an impact and then disappear along with the pavilion… Guernica was spared the same fate as Mir贸’s mural because Picasso was asked to send it to London and later to the United States”.

The painting was not to return to Spain until democracy had been returned – Juan Manuel Bonet

As it turned out, the pavilion was only the beginning. Guernica toured around the UK in 1938, says Bonet. “Picasso later entrusted the painting to MoMA in New York, as it was his wish that the painting not return to Spain until democracy had been returned to the country. This was symbolically very important.”

Through a dark lens
Guernica took on a wider meaning in the years that followed. “It speaks about the Spanish Civil War, and the destiny of civilians in it, as well as the bombs that killed so many people in this Basque city,” says Bonet. “It also remarks on all wars.” The French writer Michel Leiris was moved to say of it: “On a black and white canvas that depicts ancient tragedy… Picasso also writes our letter of doom: all that we love is going to be lost.”

Yet there was hope in it too. Amid shrieking figures and corpses, Picasso left a beacon, according to Mart铆n. “At the top, stretching out from a window, a woman with an oil lamp seems to want to illuminate the encroaching panic and darkness.”
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No Pasar谩n! (They will not pass!) by Ram贸n Puyol, who said “the rickety theory of art for art’s sake has just died” (Credit: CRAI Biblioteca del Pavell贸 de la Rep煤blica/Mayoral)

Guernica tapped into an earlier tradition, echoing Goya’s works commemorating resistance to the Napoleonic invasion of Spain.  According to curators at the Reina Sof铆a, “The grotesque vision that Goya brought to his political critique was not lost on artists as a powerful tool for crafting their own views of the present.” Picasso admired Goya’s “dark lens on Spain’s complex political and religious traditions”.

“Picasso, Mir贸, Calder and Gonz谩lez taught us that sometimes major moments such as the Spanish Civil War force us to take sides,” says gallery director Jordi Mayoral. “The works created by these artists for the pavilion are still part of the Spanish collective memory; they represented a major turning point in the Civil War and the country’s struggle between democracy and fascism”.

Picasso himself summed up his decision, remarking in 1937: “I have always believed and still believe that artists who live and work with spiritual values cannot and should not remain indifferent to a conflict in which the highest values of humanity and civilisation are at stake.”

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In 1937, in one of the worst civilian casualties of the Spanish Civil War, Fascist forces bombed the village of Guernica in Northern Spain. For Pablo Picasso, the tragedy sparked a frenzied period of work in which he produced a massive anti-war mural, titled “Guernica.” How can we make sense of this overwhelming image, and what makes it a masterpiece of anti-war art? Iseult Gillespie investigates.
Why is this painting so shocking?
TED-Ed - Iseult Gillespie

Discover the history and symbolism of Pablo Picasso’s powerful anti-war mural, “Guernica,” rendered in his signature Cubist style.

In 1937, in one of the worst civilian casualties of the Spanish Civil War, Fascist forces bombed the village of Guernica in Northern Spain. For Pablo Picasso, the tragedy sparked a frenzied period of work in which he produced a massive anti-war mural, titled “Guernica.” How can we make sense of this overwhelming image, and what makes it a masterpiece of anti-war art? Iseult Gillespie investigates.

Lesson by Iseult Gillespie, directed by Avi Ofer.
https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-is-this-painting-so-shocking-iseult-gillespie

Bella Ciao
馃憞 ♪ 馃摻️ ♪ 馃憞
The song Bella Ciao was sung by the left-wing anti-fascist resistance movement in Italy, a movement by anarchists, communists, socialists and other militant anti-fascist partisans. 
The author of the lyrics is unknown, and the music seems to come from an earlier folk song sung by riceweeders in the Po Valley. 
Another interpretation has been given following the discovery in 2006 by Fausto Giovannardi of the CD "Klezmer - Yiddish swing music" including the melody "Koilen" played in 1919 by Mishka Ziganoff.
馃憞 ♪ 馃摻️ ♪ 馃憞
Bella Ciao - La Casa de Papel
馃憞 ♪ 馃摻️ ♪ 馃憞
Una mattina mi sono svegliato,
o bella, ciao! bella, ciao! bella, ciao, ciao, ciao!
Una mattina mi sono svegliato,
e ho trovato l'invasor.

O partigiano, portami via,
o bella, ciao! bella, ciao! bella, ciao, ciao, ciao!
O partigiano, portami via,
ch茅 mi sento di morir.

E se io muoio da partigiano,
o bella, ciao! bella, ciao! bella, ciao, ciao, ciao!
E se io muoio da partigiano,
tu mi devi seppellir.

E seppellire lass霉 in montagna,
o bella, ciao! bella, ciao! bella, ciao, ciao, ciao!
E seppellire lass霉 in montagna,
sotto l'ombra di un bel fior.

Tutte le genti che passeranno,
o bella, ciao! bella, ciao! bella, ciao, ciao, ciao!
Tutte le genti che passeranno,
Mi diranno «Che bel fior!»

«脠 questo il fiore del partigiano»,
o bella, ciao! bella, ciao! bella, ciao, ciao, ciao!
«脠 questo il fiore del partigiano, morto per la libert脿!»
Bella Ciao - Manu Pilas
 (Lyrics)
馃憞 ♪ 馃摻️ ♪ 馃憞
Bella Ciao !
馃檹 馃檹馃徎 馃檹 馃檹馃従 馃檹馃徎馃檹馃従馃檹 馃檹馃徎馃檹馃従馃檹

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