Poe and the Visual Arts
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Although Edgar Allan Poe is most often identified with stories of horror and fear, there is an unrecognized and even forgotten side to the writer. He was a self-declared lover of beauty who “from childhood’s hour . . . [had] not seen / As others saw.” Poe and the Visual Arts is the first comprehensive study of how Poe’s work relates to the visual culture of his time. It reveals his “deep worship of all beauty,” which resounded in his earliest writing and never entirely faded, despite the demands of his commercial writing career. Barbara Cantalupo examines the ways in which Poe integrated visual art into sketches, tales, and literary criticism, paying close attention to the sculptures and paintings he saw in books, magazines, and museums while living in Philadelphia and New York from 1838 until his death in 1849. She argues that Poe’s sensitivity to visual media gave his writing a distinctive “graphicality” and shows how, despite his association with the macabre, his enduring love of beauty and knowledge of the visual arts richly informed his corpus.
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Poe and the Visual Arts - Barbara Cantalupo
POE AND THE VISUAL ARTS
Barbara Cantalupo
THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
An earlier version of chapter 4 appeared as Poe’s Visual Tricks,
Poe Studies / Dark Romanticism 38, nos. 1–2 (2005): 53–63.
An earlier version of chapter 5 appeared as Poe’s Responses to Nineteenth-Century American Painting,
in Edgar Allan Poe (1809–2009): Doscientos años después, ed. Margarida Rigal Aragón and Beatriz González Moreno (Cuenca: Ediciones de la Universidad de Castilla–La Mancha, 2010), 111–20.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cantalupo, Barbara, author.
Poe and the visual arts / Barbara Cantalupo.
p. cm
Summary: Explores visual allusions in the writings of Edgar Allan Poe to paintings and sculptures he saw in Philadelphia and Manhattan. Examines how his writings relate to the visual culture of his time
—Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-271-06309-6 (cloth : alk. paper)
1. Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809–1849—Knowledge—Art.
2. Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809–1849—Criticism and interpretation.
3. Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809–1849—Aesthetics.
4. Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809–1849—Technique.
5. Art and literature—United States—History—19th century.
6. Art in literature.
I. Title.
PS2642.A66C36 2014
818’.309—dc23
2013046957
Copyright © 2014 The Pennsylvania State University
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Published by The Pennsylvania State University Press,
University Park, PA 16802-1003
The Pennsylvania State University Press is a member of the Association of American University Presses.
It is the policy of The Pennsylvania State University Press to use acid-free paper. Publications on uncoated stock satisfy the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Material, ANSI Z39.48–1992.
This book is printed on paper that contains 30% post-consumer waste.
FOR Burton R. Pollin
Contents
______________
_______
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on the Text
Introduction
1
Poe’s Exposure to Art Exhibited in Philadelphia and Manhattan, 1838–1845
2
Artists and Artwork in Poe’s Short Stories and Sketches
3
Poe’s Homely Interiors
4
Poe’s Visual Tricks
5
Poe’s Art Criticism
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Illustrations
______________
_______
1 Francis Kearny, Pennsylvania Institution for the Deaf and Dumb
2 John Sartain, Burning of Pennsylvania Hall
3 Savinien Edme Dubourjal, Anne Lynch
4 Remains of the Waverley Hotel and Adjacent Houses on Broadway Two Days After the Fire
5 Nicolas Poussin, L’hiver (Winter) or Le deluge (The deluge)
6 Salvator Rosa, Landscape with Figures
7 Francis William Edmonds, Facing the Enemy
8 Francis William Edmonds, study for Facing the Enemy
9 William Sidney Mount, The Trap Sprung
10 Asher Brown Durand, An Old Man’s Reminiscences
11 Henry Fuseli, The Nightmare
12 Henry Fuseli, illustration for A Midsummer Night’s Dream
13 Joseph Mallord William Turner, Fingal’s Cave, Staffa
14 Moritz Retzsch, The Study, with Faust at His Desk and Mephistopheles as a Dog
15 Thomas Sully, Portrait of Mary Anne Heide Norris
16 Thomas Sully, Portrait of Fanny Kemble
17 John Gadsby Chapman, The Lake of the Dismal Swamp (fire screen)
18 John Gadsby Chapman, The Lake of the Dismal Swamp
19 Museu de Filadelphia
20 Auguste Hervieu, Louvre
21 Auguste Hervieu, "V’la les restes de notre Revolution de Juillet"
22 William Henry Bartlett, Chapel of Our Lady of Coldspring
23 Henry Inman, Fanny Elssler
24 Thomas Cole, View on the Catskill
25 Titian, Venus of Urbino
26 Joshua Shaw, Landscape with Cattle
27 Jean-Baptiste De Cuyper, Cupido
Acknowledgments
______________
_______
My most heartfelt thanks go to two men: my mentor and esteemed Poe scholar, the late Burton R. Pollin, and my husband, Charles Cantalupo, poet, scholar, and much-admired professor. Each, in his own way, helped make this book better: Burton’s extensive knowledge of Poe’s work and Charles’s expert advice on clear and engaging writing have both been invaluable guides. A year before his death in 2010, Burton mailed me a folder containing his handwritten notes on Poe’s references to painters, carefully matched to pages in James Harrison’s edition of Poe’s work—what an important key! All of Burton’s Poe publications are a scholar’s treasures. Throughout the time I had the privilege to know him, Burton was always available at the end of a phone line or in response to an email to help guide me in fruitful directions in my research or to fill in the gaps of my knowledge of Poe. He is much missed. Both Burton and Charles not only shared their expertise but also encouraged me to finish this book because, as they each reiterated many times, this topic is an important contribution to Poe studies. Many thanks also go to Richard Kopley for his encouragement, knowledge of Poe scholarship, and access to his incredible Poe collection; he has been a steadfast friend and colleague.
I have loving regard for my children’s respect for my intellectual pursuits: Alicia and Alexandra, my youngest daughters, showed understanding and patience when I was away doing research during their growing-up years, and Elizabeth and Christopher, my two oldest, watched me spend years as a single parent getting my Ph.D. while they were just youngsters. Important to my ongoing commitment to research and learning is knowing that my work has been a model to all of my children. It gives me pleasure to see that Liz and Chris are doing their own publishing in languages I don’t know—French and Python, respectively—and that my two youngest will someday make their own marks through violin performance.
My thanks go to The Pennsylvania State University and to my campus, Penn State Lehigh Valley, especially Kenneth Thigpen, director of academic affairs, for their ongoing support of this project. I also want to thank Judy Mishriki, Penn State Lehigh Valley’s research librarian, for her guidance and help tracking down obscure references. I am very grateful to Loretta Yenser for her copyediting and organizational help with the final draft of the manuscript; her assistance was invaluable.
Thanks also go to Nicole Joniec, Print Department assistant and Digital Collections manager at the Library Company of Philadelphia; Liz Kurtulik of the Permissions Department at Art Resource; Melanie Neil, assistant registrar at the Chrysler Museum of Art; Allison Munsell, digitization specialist at the Albany Institute of Art; Alexandra Lane, rights and reproductions manager at the White House Historical Association; Joan Albert of the Virginia Historical Association; Sandra Stelts, curator of rare books and manuscripts at The Pennsylvania State University Libraries; Jaclyn Penny, rights and reproductions coordinator at the American Antiquarian Society; and Peter Roiest of the Koninklijk Museum in Antwerp, who provided valuable information on Jean-Baptist De Cuyper, as well as Marcos Pujol for his guidance and support during my research trip to Antwerp.
I have much respect for and feel very grateful to Julie Schoelles at The Pennsylvania State University Press for her incredibly attentive copyediting and the care she gave to the manuscript. And, of course, I am grateful to Kendra Boileau, editor-in-chief, and all of the staff at the press, including Robert Turchick, for their excitement about the project and their support throughout this process.
Note on the Text
______________
_______
The majority of quotations from Poe’s works are taken from Thomas Ollive Mabbott’s two-volume collection Tales and Sketches and his edition of Complete Poems. Most of Poe’s texts were published multiple times and underwent revisions from printing to printing. The versions printed in Mabbott’s Tales and Sketches are frequently (though not always) drawn from The Works of the Late Edgar Allan Poe, edited by Rufus Griswold and published from 1850 to 1856. Preceding each tale or sketch, Mabbott provides a list of its appearances in earlier publications, and he uses footnotes to identify the changes made to each printing. Using these notes, I have occasionally modified the quotations from Tales and Sketches so that they directly reflect the earliest printing of the work under discussion. Where this is the case, I have specified the quoted version in the text or endnotes. However, the dates of publication given for Poe’s works throughout this book always refer to their first printings.
______________
_______
INTRODUCTION
Although Edgar Allan Poe’s name is most often identified with stories of horror and fear, Poe and the Visual Arts stakes a claim for the less familiar Poe—the one who often goes unrecognized or forgotten—the Poe whose early love of beauty was a strong and enduring draw, who from childhood’s hour . . . [had] not seen / As others saw—.
¹ The evidence in this book demonstrates that Poe’s deep worship of all beauty,
expressed in an 1829 letter to John Neal when Poe was just twenty, never entirely faded, despite the demands of his commercial writing and editorial career. In that letter, Poe appealed to Neal as a man that loves the same beauty which I adore—the beauty of the natural blue sky and the sunshiny earth.
² Poe and the Visual Arts looks at Poe’s connection to such visual beauty, his commitment to graphicality
(a word he coined), and his knowledge of the visual arts, noting what he saw, how he used what he saw, and how he criticized those who would not see.
Poe valued the artist’s vision as well as the ability of a writer to create in words what can be seen by an artistical eye.
³ His regard for the artist’s ability to see how various, seemingly arbitrary combinations can create a composition of beauty is clearly articulated in The Landscape Garden
: "No such combinations of scenery exist in Nature as the painter of genius has in his power to produce. No such Paradises are to be found in reality as have glowed upon the canvass of Claude.⁴ In the most enchanting of natural landscapes, there will always be found a defect or an excess. . . . [The artist] positively knows, that such and such apparently arbitrary arrangements of matter, or form, constitute, and alone constitute, the true Beauty" (Tales, 1:707–8). The explicit references to paintings and painters, such as Claude, in many of Poe’s stories and sketches enhance thematic concerns or help produce a preconceived effect. In other works, such as Landor’s Cottage
and A Tale of the Ragged Mountains,
Poe obliquely refers to the Hudson River school painters by evoking their paintings in his own descriptive prose rather than directly naming the paintings he has in mind. In this way, the tales signal a turn in Poe’s visual aesthetics from the sublime to the beautiful. In addition, Poe’s concern with literary process—as evidenced in The Philosophy of Composition
and The Poetic Principle,
for example, as well as in many of his (often harsh) reviews of poetry and fiction—reflects his astute awareness of the similarity between the writing and painting processes. He was keenly aware of how a painter uses his medium to produce a startling effect,
a concept essential to Poe’s storytelling.
This affinity is evidenced in his February 1838 Southern Literary Messenger review of Alexander Slidell’s The American in England. Poe applauds Slidell’s book as being wise by virtue of being superficial and justifies this seeming contradiction by arguing that the depth of an argument is not, necessarily, its wisdom—this depth lying where Truth is sought more often than where she is found.
Poe then compares Slidell’s literary effort with the painterly process by observing, The touches of a painting which, to minute inspection, are ‘confusion worse confounded’ will not fail to start boldly out to the cursory glance of a connoisseur.
⁵ In noting that the overall effect of a painting (as seen by a connoisseur
) overrides the minute, seemingly confused
strokes that produce that effect, Poe once again affirms his belief that truth often lies on the surface. He states this quite clearly in his Letter to B–––
: As regards the greater truths, men oftener err by seeking them at the bottom than at the top.
⁶ In his review of Slidell’s work, Poe also foregrounds his understanding of how a painter creates illusion and how that process applies to literary technique. For example, he compares Slidell’s literary finesse with painterly technique as follows: "[Mr. Slidell] has felt that the apparent, not the real, is the province of a painter—and that to give (speaking technically) the idea of any desired object, the toning down, or the utter neglect of certain portions of that object is absolutely necessary to the proper bringing out of other portions—portions by whose sole instrumentality the idea of the object is afforded."⁷
Three years later, Poe reiterated this understanding in a May 1841 Graham’s Magazine review of Charles Dickens’s The Old Curiosity Shop, and Other Tales. Here Poe points out that a painter, rather than attempting to create a direct duplicate of the subject to be depicted, uses his medium to communicate its truth to the viewer through the manipulation of brush stroke, light, composition, line, and shadow—exaggerating elements when necessary and diminishing others to create the desired effect. As he explains, No critical principle is more firmly based in reason than that a certain amount of exaggeration is essential in the proper depicting of truth itself. We do not paint an object to be true, but to appear true to the beholder. Were we to copy nature with accuracy the object copied would seem unnatural.
⁸
In 1845, in Marginalia 243, Poe once again returned to his long-standing idea that the "mere imitation, however accurate, of what is in Nature, entitles no man to the sacred name of ‘Artist.’ As noted in
The Landscape Garden and
The Domain of Arnheim, Poe strongly believed that transformation, combination, and composition create beauty beyond what nature can produce, and this belief is evident in the marginalia entry:
We can, at any time, double the true beauty of an actual landscape by half closing our eyes as we look at it. The naked Senses sometimes see too little—but then always they see too much. In this short piece, Poe also provides a definition of
Art:
Were I called upon to define, very briefly, the term ‘Art,’ I should call it ‘the reproduction of what the Senses perceive in Nature through the veil of the soul.’"⁹
Often, too, Poe used visual metaphors as high praise. For example, in his September 1839 Burton’s Gentleman’s Magazine review of Friedrich Fouqué’s Undine, Poe overwhelmingly praises his writing: ‘Undine’ is a model of models, in regard to the high artistical talent which it evinces. We could write volumes in a detailed commentary upon its various beauties in this respect. Its unity is absolute—its keeping unbroken. Yet every minute point of the picture fills and satisfies the eye
(Works, 10:37). Furthermore, in his February 1836 Autography,
Poe applauds John P. Kennedy’s handwriting: "This is our beau ideal of penmanship. Its prevailing character is picturesque. . . . We should suppose Mr. Kennedy to have the eye of a painter, more especially in regard to the picturesque" (Tales, 1:273). Poe’s praise for the painterly process and for visual art was consistent throughout his literary career.
Chapter 1 of this book, Poe’s Exposure to Art Exhibited in Philadelphia and Manhattan, 1838–1845,
suggests that Poe’s keen sense of visual aesthetics was nurtured by his exposure to the paintings and sculptures in art venues in Philadelphia and New York, where he lived from 1838 to his death in 1849. The graphicality
of Poe’s own work is enhanced by allusions to painters and paintings, as demonstrated in chapter 2, Artists and Artwork in Poe’s Short Stories and Sketches.
This chapter provides a chronological overview of the references to visual artists, paintings, and sculptures in the stories written or revised during Poe’s most productive period, from 1838 to 1849. I show how these allusions build on Poe’s valuing the artist’s vision as well as the ability of the writer to create in words what can be seen by an artistical eye.
The chapter also provides evidence that supports Kent Ljungquist’s claim in The Grand and the Fair: Poe’s Landscape Aesthetics and Pictorial Techniques that [Poe’s] later fiction and criticism mark a general turn away from the sublime.
Ljungquist explains, Beauty becomes Poe’s guiding principle, and imagination is the predominant faculty, all other faculties subordinated to it with the sublime added almost as a rather unimportant sub-category.
¹⁰
Chapter 3, Poe’s Homely Interiors,
examines the ways Poe’s well-known strategy of manipulating the merest detail can reveal undercurrent meanings, thematic resonances, nuanced complications of plot, and/or satirical responses to cultural norms. Specifically, this chapter examines the homely items of interior decoration that function in this way in The Devil in the Belfry,
William Wilson,
The Philosophy of Furniture,
The Domain of Arnheim,
and Landor’s Cottage.
Poe also used visual cues in an entirely different way in his tales to confront the propensity to see what is desired and not what is actually there. This phenomenon, studied in chapter 4, Poe’s Visual Tricks,
reveals how the act of seeing plays a pivotal role in short stories such as Ligeia,
The Sphinx,
and The Spectacles.
Finally, chapter 5, Poe’s Art Criticism,
details the critical responses to visual art that Poe published throughout his career but focuses especially on his responses to the art on display in New York during the time he lived in Manhattan and wrote for the Columbia Spy and the Broadway Journal.
Poe’s attentive response to the visual arts manifests itself in his writing style as well. The graphicality
of his prose and poetry has influenced visual artists throughout the centuries, including Robert Motherwell, Salvador Dali, Max Ernst, and René Magritte.¹¹ For example, Kevin Hayes notes that Magritte painted images entitled The Domain of Arnheim in 1938, 1949, 1950, and 1962, but rather than images of Poe’s tales, Magritte’s works represent images inspired by Poe.
¹² Burton Pollin’s Images of Poe’s Works: A Comprehensive Descriptive Catalogue of Illustrations details the remarkable extent of this influence, making it undeniable that Poe’s stories and poems are visually provocative. As Pollin notes at the beginning of his introduction, Edgar Allan Poe has become one of the most widely and most diversely illustrated of authors by virtue of the sketches by Manet, Redon, Doré, Ensor, Gauguin, Beardsley, Whistler, Kubin, and more than seven hundred other artists.
¹³ In an interview published in the Edgar Allan Poe Review in 2001, I asked Dr. Pollin why he believed the residual effect of Poe’s work often provokes creative responses from people of all disciplines in the arts—dance, music, and especially the visual arts. He pointedly responded,
We have to remember, one of Poe’s creations . . . : the word was graphicality
—and Poe coined it. Poe felt that the English language needed to be expanded—and, of course, he felt no hesitation in doing so . . . to express ideas, not necessarily images, but ideas which he felt were needed in the development of talking about the arts, particularly. . . . Graphicality
is one of the things that Poe aimed at in his tales, at least, and to a certain extent in his poems, it is something an artist can latch onto quite easily—images that are striking and startling, in their nuances and the particular adumbrations that Poe gives to those objects, images, call them what you will, in language, because they convey something to him that he feels has never been done before. That’s why the Impressionists were so enormously influenced by Poe, or the Symbolists, people like Redon, for example, or Manet.¹⁴
Pollin’s observation echoes what Washington Irving wrote to Poe in an 1839 letter. After reading The Fall of the House of Usher,
Irving had this to say: I am much pleased with a tale called ‘The House of Usher,’ and should think that a collection of tales, equally well written, could not fail of being favorably received. . . . Its graphic effect is powerful.
¹⁵ Poe’s profound influence on visual artists demonstrates the graphicality
of his tales.
Poe’s keen sense of visual aesthetics was additionally enhanced by exposure to the work of American artists whose paintings appeared as engravings in the magazines and gift books that he reviewed or where his own work was published. For example, Henry Inman’s The Newsboy appeared in The Gift Book for 1843 alongside The Pit and the Pendulum,
and William Sidney Mount’s The Trap Sprung was included in The Gift Book for 1844 along with The Purloined Letter.
In sketches and short stories such as The Assignation,
Landor’s Cottage,
and The Man of the Crowd,
Poe included references to painters and artworks, and many of his tales focus on the art of seeing or the ways visual tricks can be used to dupe, deter, or detract.¹⁶ In addition, Poe’s working relationship with Charles Briggs, who wrote most of the reviews of the exhibits at the National Academy of Design and the American Art-Union, brought Poe into close contact with a style of art criticism that went beyond a mere listing of paintings on display—the usual fare found in the daily and weekly newspapers of the time. Poe’s own forays into art criticism highlight his visual aesthetics found in sketches and tales such as The Landscape Garden
and The Philosophy of Furniture.
The stories, sketches, and art criticism Poe wrote in his later years were enhanced by the art he saw on display in Philadelphia and New York and by his acquaintance with visual artists. In Philadelphia the prominence of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts provided a rich resource, as did Poe’s friendships with artists Felix O. C. Darley, John Sartain, John Gadsby Chapman, Thomas Sully, and the latter’s nephew Robert Sully. Thomas