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Montage and Architecture

Author(s): Sergei M. Eisenstein, Yve-Alain Bois, Michael Glenny


Source: Assemblage, No. 10 (Dec., 1989), pp. 110-131
Published by: The MIT Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3171145
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Sergei M. Eisenstein
Montage and Architecture

Introduction by Yve-Alain Bois

Translatedfrom the Russian Discovered a few years ago by Naum Kleiman, the curator
by Michael Glenny of the Eisenstein Museum in Moscow and editor of the
director's writings, the text entitled (by whom?) "Montage
Sergei M. Eisenstein (1898-1948) was a
Soviet filmmakerand theorist. and Architecture" was to be inserted in a book-length work
entitled Montage, written between 1937 and 1940.1 One
Yve-Alain Bois is Associate Professorof might suppose that it was written shortly after another long
Art History at Johns Hopkins University. essay bearing a Spanish title, "El Greco y el cine," for
Eisenstein refers to it there.

We just presentedin detail the issue of montage computation


within an architecturalensemble. The Acropolis of Athens was at
stake. The notes Choisy devoted to it give a magnificent picture
of the construction and the computation of such a montage from
the point of view of a moving spectator.But if the spectatorcan-
not move, he has to gather in one unique point the elements of
that which is dispersedin reality, unseizable to a single gaze,
scatteredabout, but which the author must absolutely juxtapose,
for it is in taking in all these elements that the spectatorwill
obtain an impression of the object or - moreover- the im-
pressionwhich the author wishes to induce in transformingthe
relationshipsof reality, that which he wants to inscribe for the
perception. Cinematographicmontage is, too, a means to 'link'
in one point - the screen - various elements (fragments)of a
phenomenon filmed in diverse dimensions, from diverse points of
view and sides.2

Incidentally, the two texts were separated and the El Greco


essay reworked in 1939 to be partly integrated in Non-
indifferent Nature (1945-47) and in "Vertical Montage"
Frontispiece:Gianlorenzo
Bernini,baldacchino, (1940);3 but they should be read as two sides of the same
St. Peter's, Rome coin, as two symmetrical facets of the vast inquiry that

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assemblage 10

Eisenstein had begun during the late 1920s into montage culture. Writing - for their writing is primarilyrepresen-
and cinematographyin the "otherarts." tational. The hieroglyph."The double movement is hard
to perceive, as Eisenstein, takinga shortcut, skipsvarious
"It seems that all the arts, throughout the centuries, tended
towardcinema. Conversely, cinema helps us to understand steps. Initially, he arrivesat the pictogramthrough his
search for an explanatorymodel for what he intends to do
their methods," wrote Eisenstein.4 Sequentialityand mon-
in his project of an "intellectualcinema" (what strikeshim,
tage, defined by Eisenstein as the two essential conditions
of film as a medium, became for him a grid for the appre- particularly,is the pictogrammaticcombinatorystructure,
hension of literature(Dickens, Diderot, Tolstoy, Zola, notably, the possible formationof a sign for an abstract
concept from the combination of two signs, whether iconic
Pushkin, Gogol, Dostoyevsky)and, most of all, of painting or not, that referto a concrete object). But he then
and the graphic arts. But far from partakingof a search for
reversesthe direction of the metaphoricarrow:cinematog-
legitimation - the kind of hunting for "precursors" that
became the common occupation of historiansof ideas raphy is like a pictogrammaticsystem, hence the picto-
Eisenstein's totalizing interpretationsjeopardizenotions of grammaticsystem is cinematographic,and, by extension,
the culture that produced it. Thus not only Japanesewrit-
historical filiations or influences to propose instead a criti-
cal loop: the new methods of film can help to explain ing, but also haiku poetry, Sharaku'sprints, Kabukithe-
ater, and so on are understoodas featuresof montage, as
Gogol or Bach, but the contrapunctalmontage of these
latter can, in turn, function as a propaedeuticmodel for exemplificationsof the cinematographicper se.
the analysis of Potemkin.5 One of the most remarkable Obviously, this strategyof the double movement has to be
examples of this critical loop can be found in an essay reinscribedin the context of the polemics of the time, and
entitled "Beyondthe Shot," written in 1929 as a postscript one could read Eisenstein'snumerous texts on painting as
to a book on Japanesecinema. The opening line, quite a direct answer to the accusation of"pictorialism,"formu-
exemplaryof Eisenstein's extraordinarilysophisticateduse lated against his films by no less a painterthan Malevich:7
of rhetoricaldevices, detonates with an oxymoron:"It is a if my films are pictorial, Eisenstein seems to be arguing, it
weird and wonderful feat to have written a pamphlet on is because many painterswere, unknowingly,practicing
something that in reality does not exist. There is, for cinematographyand a whole section of the historyof
example, no such thing as a cinema without cinematogra- painting should be rewrittenin terms of cinematographic
phy. And yet the author of the pamphlet precedingthis analysis. El Greco, but also Utamaro, the Mexican mural-
essay has contrived to write a book about the cinema of a ists, Chinese and Japanesescroll painters, Posada, Valentin
country that has no cinematography."6Then follows the Serov, David Burliuk, RobertDelaunay, Daumier:the list
defusing of the paradox:"Cinema is: so many corporations, growsalmost each time a new essay of his becomes avail-
such and such turnoversof capital, so and so many stars, able. But one would be wrong to reduce Eisenstein'sobses-
such and such dramas. Cinematographyis, firstand fore- sion with this search for cinematographyoutside cinema to
most, montage." Japanesecinema does exist (there are cor- a mere tactical hobby or to the returnof a nineteenth-
porations, stars, dramas), but it is "completelyunawareof century positivistinterestin synesthesiaor "correspondence
montage," hence noncinematographic.The distinction between the arts."And art historianswould do well to
between cinema and cinematographyserves firstto clarify abandon their contempt for Eisenstein'sreadings,for if
Eisenstein's avant-gardiststance (this same opposition will these are rarelyaccurate, as far as mere facts are con-
be frequently reinstalled in film theory from his time to cerned, they provide, more often than not, extraordinary
our own, albeit in various guises). But Eisenstein'snext
insights.
move overturnsthe mechanical dualism of the polemical
pair and reveals in one leap the heuristic potential of this In most of his essayson painting Eisenstein searchesfor
opposition: "Nevertheless,the principle of montage can be sequentialityand montage in picturesand tries to invent,
identified as the basic element of Japaneserepresentational as it were, a new category,"betweenpainting and cinema"

112
Eisenstein

(he calls it cinematism), that would enable him to disclose (sequentialityplus montage) was immediately geared
a fundamental level of articulationin images, unspecific to towardthe structureof perception in one of its most ele-
any medium in particularand independent of the "sub- mental features, namely, the decentering effect of parallax
stance of expression,"in the words of the linguist Louis (the change of position of a body, hence with its percep-
Hjelmslev. This led Eisenstein to numerous reflections tion, due to a change of position of the observer).And this
about the inscription of time in a static picture and about concern, in turn, reinscribeda most "concrete"term
the sequential nature of aesthetic perception, ideas that (the bodily movement of the spectator)into the highly
were upsetting the very basis of modernistpictorialaesthet- "abstract"field of architecture:leaving aside the issue of
ics (such as Lessing'sseparationof arts of time and of space representation,the loop produced a return of the repressed,
or Kant'sexclusion of duration as a parameterof aesthetic as it were, in isolating one of the architectural"materials"
experience). At the same moment, Klee was founding his that had been forgottenby architects.
pictorial research- counter to Matisse or Mondrian, for Eisenstein'stext on Piranesi is well known,9 and to make a
that matter, all the major agents of modern painting - on
the idea that "the eye must 'graze'over the surface, sharply long story short, I will allow myself to referto an essay that
I wrote on the sculptor Richard Serrain which Eisenstein's
graspingportion after portion, to convey them to the brain
which collects and stores the impression."8There is no piece functioned as an importantally.10In this essay,
which was intended as a rappel a MM les architectesand
room here, of course, to discuss this issue at any length: I
was following the steps of Peter Collins, ManfredoTafuri,
simply want to point out that Eisenstein'scinematographic Vincent Scully, and Ulya Vogt-Goknill, I tracedback to
grid of interpretationled him to a wholly unorthodoxcon- Piranesithe involvement of architectswith the play of par-
ception of the pictorial fact at the very moment that a sim- allax. By his elaboratedisjunction of plan and elevation,
ilar conception was espoused by a painter whose work, it
which leads to a vertiginousfragmentationof architectural
seems to me for that exact reason, remains largely
underestimated. space, Piranesi undermines the baroque domination of the
a priori, gestaltistground plan in our apprehensionof
The same patterncan be found in Eisenstein'sdiscussion architecture,deprivingthe spectatorof any center of refer-
of architecture.The problem is different(he is no longer ence, of any definitive climax, and initiates the ruptureof
concerned with movement in its virtuality,but with the the modern movement in architecture. But in retracingthe
real movement of a beholder in space);but here, too, the evolution of this radicallynew concept of space, the impli-
heterogeneityof his point of view allows Eisenstein to pin- cation of the bodily movement of the spectatorin architec-
point essential characteristicsof architecturethat had long tural design - through the theories of the picturesquein
been repressed,and this precisely when they were "redis- England and those of Boullee and his circle in France,
covered"by Le Corbusier. In a sense, the loop effect is both highly indebted to Piranesi- I was surprisedto see
even more productive in the case of architecture. Unlike such a concern disappearfrom the theoretical discussions
painting, architecture(whose technicalities he knew well, of architecturealmost as rapidlyas it had emerged as a
having studied as an engineer) is one of the underlying fundamental issue. It is at this juncture that Choisy's dis-
motifs of Eisenstein's films. From The Strike on, Eisen- covery of the Greek picturesqueintervened. Formulated
stein had to find practicalanswersto the problem of how almost a century after Boullee's treatise, it appearsas a
to film a building, how to transformit, from a passive major coup de force, whose impact on Le Corbusier,half a
setting of the action, into a major agent of the plot. With century later, played a significant role in the evolution of
the solutions came the criteriaof judgment:some buildings his architecturalconception and the elaborationof his idea
are more apt than others, cinematographicallyspeaking of the promenadearchitecturale.I had at my disposal a
(Eisenstein'spreferencefor Gothic architectureis a case in chronological and logical sequence: Piranesi(Eisenstein),
point). But because architectureis nonmimetic, unlike Choisy, Le Corbusier. I was wholly unaware, then, of
cinema, Eisenstein's inquiry into its "cinematographicity" Eisenstein'sdirect involvement with Choisy,11of Choisy's

113
assemblage 10

debt to Piranesi, and of Eisenstein'sand Le Corbusier's recursin all his writings, let us turn to the one page he
fondness for each other's work:12nothing could have com- ever devoted to axonometry,in a note that figuresas a
forted me more than my recent discoveryof these three forewordto his Histoire. After having remarkedupon the
confirmations of the logical necessity of my chronological clarity of this graphic mode of representationand the
sequence. immediacy of measuringthat it entails, Choisy writes, "In
this system, a single image, agitated[mouvementee]and
Again, it is incidentally that I came upon Eisenstein's animated like the building itself, replacesthe abstractfigu-
essay. Working on a history of axonometry,in which a ration fractionedin plan, section, and elevation. The
long chapter is devoted to Choisy, I was tryingto under- readerhas in front of his eyes, simultaneously,the ground
stand why, startingfrom an apparentlyidentical ideological
plan, the exteriorof the building, its section, and its inte-
agenda (positivism, rationalism, functionalism), the illus- rior disposition."Agitated and animated like the building
trationsof Viollet-le-Duc and those of Choisy were so
itself:for Choisy, axonometryis a mode of enunciating vir-
strikinglydifferent. The former uses any possible graphic tual movement. Not only is it a perfect instrumenteither
system - often combining the most disparatemethods of to expresswith utmost clarity the temporalityof the build-
representationin a single image - but axonometry;the
ing process, showing its differentstageson a single figure
latter, with a very few exceptions, uses only axonometry.
One of the answers lay, in fact, in the most notable excep- (as in Art de bctir chez les Romains), or to reel off the
historical mutations of a building type (as in the Histoire)
tion, so intelligently picked up by Eisenstein:that is, the - two concerns that were hardlyViollet's - but it can
perspectivalstoryboardthat Choisy elaboratesto explicate also serve as a substitutefor the storyboardto declare the
his discovery that the nonsymmetryof the Acropolisof
Athens, which the Beaux-Artsarchitectsfailed to under- temporalityof perception, preciselybecause it does not
referto a fixed point of view. A single perspectiveview of a
stand and even tried to conceal in their surveys, was aes-
building - the sort of romantic "tableau"favoredby
thetically constructed- this principle being enacted in Viollet-le-Duc - would have immediatelyacted as the
other Greek building ensembles as well. Not that Choisy
was the first to speak about the Greek picturesque. Even privilegedview, as an obstacle blocking in the imagination
of the readerthe infinite potentialityof other possible
Viollet-le-Duc, and this is a unicum in an oeuvre other- views. A storyboardfor each building or ensemble of
wise entirely unconcerned by peripateticvision, had noted
that one does not see Greek monuments in "geometral" buildings could, of course, have given an idea of the
and had spoken in terms of "ponderationdes masses"and abrupttransformationsin its appearanceaccordingto one's
"miseen scene," two notions furtherelaboratedby Choisy point of view, but then Choisy's Histoirede l'architecture,
for example, which is already 1,442 pages long with 1,700
and Le Corbusier.13 But Choisy was the firstto take the
issue literally, the first to attempt to retracein its slightest illustrations,would have become a very fat encyclopedia
details the aesthetic motivation of the apparentdisorderin (not to mention the length of time requiredto produce it).
the placement of buildings on the Acropolis and to link it Thus, for Choisy, axonometryfunctions, in part, to make
possible a cinematic reading. When he sketchesa diagram
precisely to the variablepoint of view of a mobile specta- in axonometry,he providesall the elements needed to
tor. Indeed, this endeavor was for him a startingpoint:
induce a mental image of the variousaspectsof the build-
although the illustratedsequence exhumed by Eisenstein
ing: its ground plan, its section, its elevation, but also the
appearedin Choisy's Histoire de l'architecture,published in
1899, his findings about the Acropolis were alreadydis- respectivepositions of its partsin space. Nothing is easier
than to slide one's mental scanner on the diagramand to
cussed (albeit not illustrated)in his firstpublication, when
he was still a student, in 1865.14 imagine the perspectiveview attainedat each of its stops.
There is no central point in axonometry;it is entirely
Knowing that Choisy begins with a concern for the cine- based on the notion of permutability,of infinite transfor-
matic perception of architecture, a theme that constantly mations;in itself, the system presupposesconstant shifts in

114
Eisenstein

perception. The few other exceptions in the Histoire con- enough with the issue to assertthe validity of his story (the
firm the cinematic function of axonometryfor Choisy: most recent interpretationof the stemme of Bernini'sbal-
when he gives but a single elevation for a building type, it dacchino does retain the obstetricreading, but makes no
is because he feels that interiorarticulationis of no interest mention of a hidden political charge, on the contrary),17
and that everythinglies in the sole facade (Venetian pal- but Eisenstein's interest in contextualizationshould be
azzi, French hotels particuliersfrom the sixteenth century stressed,for it was certainly not a common feat at the
on, etc.). Eisenstein had found certain buildings more time. Until quite recently, art history was content to ana-
cinematographicthan others, Choisy certain ones more lyze individual worksof art without checking the significa-
cinematic than others, and it is no surprisethat some of tion their spatial placement in an ensemble could entail:
their preferredexamples (Chartres,Haga Sophia) coincide. again, Eisenstein's heterogeneous approachled the way.
His interpretationof the "mystery"of Bernini's stemme
At first, however, there seems to be a strikingdifference
might be wrong, but the conclusive line remains a
between Eisenstein's and Choisy's point of view. Choisy's "reminderto the architects"as well as to all of us who try
interest in peripateticvision never obscured his main con- to understandworksof art:"In themselves, the pictures,
cern, that is, architectureas the pure art of construction. the phases, the elements of the whole are . . . indecipher-
This partlyexplains the total absence of the baroque in his able. The blow is struckonly when the elements are
monumental Histoire:for him, it invented nothing as far
juxtaposedinto a sequential image."
as construction was concerned, and, morever, it constantly Y.-A.B.
hid the structuresof buildings under various masks. Choisy
the rationalistcould not stand the illusionism of the
baroque. The name of Borromini appearstaboo. All that
one can find in the Histoire is a brief mention of the grow-
ing social status of architectsfrom Michelangelo to Ber-
nini. But given Choisy's deliberatelymodern conception of
space, one wonders whether it was not again for aesthetic
reasons that he was led to discardentirely the central space
of the baroque - just as Piranesi had done alreadyand Le
Corbusierwould do later.15Eisenstein, unlike Choisy, did
not base his stance on the Puritan myths of rationalism,
but his choice might not have differedso greatlyfrom that
Sergei Eisenstein, illustrationin
of the French engineer: while two-thirdsof "Montageand Nonindifferent Nature of a
Architecture"are devoted to Bernini's baldacchino in Saint drawing by DavidBurliuk
Peter's, nothing is said of its architecturalfeatures, nor of
the building that houses it. Anyone familiar with Eisen-
stein's mode of writing - its meanders, abruptdigressions,
joyful paradoxes,always directed towarda punch line-
would hesitate to stressan antibaroqueposition for the qA.~~~~~ -
film director, yet one cannot fail to notice that instead of
discussing the "maternal"space of baroque architecture,
to speak like Scully,16he preferredto turn toward OWNSr.M.-

t
iconography.
The second part of Eisenstein's essay is thus disappointing Eisenstein,decomposition and
from an architecturalpoint of view. I am not familiar reframingof Burliuk'sdrawing

115
assemblage 10

Montage and Architecture

[When talking about cinema], the word path is not


used by chance. Nowadaysit is the imaginarypath fol-
lowed by the eye and the varyingperceptionsof an object
that depend on how it appearsto the eye. Nowadaysit
may also be the path followed by the mind acrossa multi-
plicity of phenomena, far apartin time and space, gath-
ered in a certain sequence into a single meaningful
concept; and these diverse impressionspass in front of an
immobile spectator.
In the past, however, the opposite was the case: the specta-
tor moved between [a series of] carefullydisposedphenom-
ena that he absorbedsequentiallywith his visual sense.
This traditionhas been preservedin any child's drawing.
Not only has the movement of the eye been given back to
the action of the child himself moving in space, but the
picture itself appearsas the path along which a number of
aspects of the subject are revealedsequentially.
This is a typical child's drawing. As a representationof a
pond with trees along its bank it appearsmeaninglessuntil
we understandits internal dynamics. The trees are not
depicted from one viewpoint, as adults are accustomedto
show them in a picture or in a single frame of film. Here
the drawingdepicts a series of trees as they are revealed
along the path that the observerfollows between them. If
the line AB representsthe path taken by the observer,then
at any given point in the sequence one through nine each
separatetree is disposedentirely "reasonably": it represents
a frontal view of the tree in question at each corresponding
Drawingsfrom the second point on the path.
edition of HeinrichSchafer's
Von agyptischer Kunst, 1922 Exactly similar are the survivingdrawingsof old Russian
buildings, such as, for instance, the fifteenth-century(?)
palace of Kolomenskoye,in which there is an identical
combination of "plan"and "elevation."2For here the path
is a movement across the plan, while the frontalviews of
the buildings are shown in elevation, seen from specific
points on the plan.
This can be seen even more vividly in the example of an
Egyptianpainting, representinga pond with trees and

116
Eisenstein

buildings around it, depicted according to exactly the same


principle.3
It is curious that in the period of artisticdecadence at the
turn of the twentieth century (which reflectedthe deca-
dence of bourgeois society), in a period markedby every
form of regressionin the arts (for furthercomment on this
see below), there occurred a curious "renaissance"of a
similar kind of archaism. We may interpretit as something
like a shriek uttered by painting as a premonition of its
metamorphosisinto cinematography.Figure 1 shows the
scheme for a series of paintingsby David Burliuk.4In a 1.
slightly different mode, he is pursuing the same aim as
Delaunay, whose [pictures]distortedthe Eiffel Tower by
dislocating [its structuralelements].
It is also curious that in this final stage before its transition
to cinematography,painting turns its representations
inward, whereas the same aspirationat the dawn of draw-
ing and painting presentedobjects through extraversion. p.4lrlr
That intraversion,of course, contains a profound sense of
retreat"into onself," of regression"awayfrom"reality,
unlike the second instance, which is characterizedby look-
ing outwardinto the surroundingreality, into an expansive I~~~~~ 1,

widening of horizons.
K
Painting has remained incapable of fixing the total repre-
sentation of a phenomenon in its full visual multidimen-
sionality. (There have been numberless attemptsto do
\Ii
I,

this). Only the film camera has solved the problem of


doing this on a fiat surface, but its undoubted ancestor in
this capabilityis - architecture.The Greeks have left us
the most perfect examples of shot design, change of shot,
and shot length (that is, the duration of a particular
impression). Victor Hugo called the medieval cathedrals
"booksin stone" (see Notre Dame de Paris). The Acropolis
of Athens has an equal right to be called the perfectex-
ample of one of the most ancient films. 2.
I shall here quote in full from Choisy's Histoire d'architec-
ture,5 in which I shall not alter a single comma, and I
would only ask you to look at it with the eye of a film-
maker:it is hard to imagine a montage sequence for an
architecturalensemble more subtly composed, shot by
shot, than the one that our legs create by walking among
the buildings of the Acropolis (figure 2).

117
assemblage 10

/^^l^^ "TheAcropolis is a cliff, isolated on all sides, whose summit is


dedicatedto the worship of the national deities. At point T was
the mark made by Poseidon'strident, while near to it grew the
" -
j F olive tree sacred to Athene.
u In immediate proximityto this sacredspot a temple was built to
'ulT
Xu
-uu"u\ tJ
both gods.
The site being empty after a fire, it was thereforepossibleto build
^-___^-^ .-. -a new sanctuaryon the very spot indicatedby legend. The temple
-
_.-:_-----
----- -----
----- - was moved to point S and given the name of Erechtheion.
_ ...._

The highest point (P) was the site in this and another era (the
1 - ' .so' e. . time of the Pisistradesand afterthe PersianWar) of the great
v"~
.~~
.~. r~! ~ temple of Athene - the Parthenon.
i|^~
/^Q~~~ ,
>Between the Parthenonand the entrance to the Acropoliswas
". ./&g disposeda series of smaller temples, evidently relatingto both the
ancient and the new Acropolis. ... In this same space the colos-
sal statue of Athene Promakhos(the Warrior)was erected in the
1--L fifth century B.C.
3 The Propylaeum(M) formed the frontalfacade of the Acropolis
(in both the old and the new layout) ...
The two layouts differedonly in detail. The first, however, was a
collection of buildings of variousepochs, whereasthe second was
laid out to a single plan and adaptedto the site, which had been
cleared as the result of a fire. The apparentassymetryof this new
Acropolis is only a means of lending picturesquenessto this group
|; ll .r"',.,',?^8~ ?ofbuildings, which have been laid out with more art than any
others ...
~i
alS ^^lwK'~~~~r-^Sl
_ becomes clear from the series of panoramasthat unfolded
~~~~~~[This]
before visitorsto the Acropolisin the fifth century B.C.
View of the Propylaeum.The general idea of the plan of the
Propylaeumcan be seen in figure 3. ...
q'bj_- _t~,i.s oWesee the ~symmetrical
d central block and two noticeablydifferent
I I" 3|wings
cs - the right-handone broaderand the left-hand one less
so. ....
7?:~H~R ~~' ~ At first sight, nothing could be more uneven than this plan, but
KI 4 / tE in fact it constitutes a completely balanced whole in which the
general symmetryof the masses is accompaniedby a subtle diver-
|\r ' \~ D;~ ^'sity in the details. . . . The optical symmetryis impeccable. ...
*~'
.>* I First view of the square;Athene Promakhos.Passingby the Propy-
laeum, the spectator'seye embracesthe Parthenon, the Erech-
4. theion, and Athene Promakhos(figure4).
In the foregroundtowersthe statue of Athene Promakhos;the
Erechtheion and the Parthenonare in the background,so that
the whole of this firstpanoramais subordinatedto the statue,

118
Eisenstein

which is its central point and which createsan impressionof


unity. The Parthenon only acquires its significance when the visi-
tor loses sight of this gigantic piece of sculpture.
The Parthenonand its oblique perspectives.To modern thinking,
the Parthenon- the great temple of the Acropolis- should be
placed opposite the main entrance, but the Greeks reasonedquite
differently.The cliff of the Acropolis has an uneven surface, and
the Greeks, without altering its natural relief, placed the main
temple on the highest point at the edge of the cliff, facing the
city (figure 5). I
h

Placed thus, the Parthenon firstof all faces the spectator


obliquely. The ancients generally preferredoblique views:they
are more picturesque, whereas a frontal view of the facade is 5.
more majestic.6Each of them is allotted a specific role. An
oblique view is the general rule, while a view en face is a calcu-
lated exception (figure 6).

The central body of the Propylaeumis presenteden face, just as


we head straightfor the pronaosof the Parthenon, crossingthe
square of the Acropolis. With the exception of the two examples
given, where this effect is deliberatelycalculated, all the other
structurespresent themselves at an angle - as does the temple of
Athene Ergane (H), when the spectatorreaches its precinct at =9
r.8Z
I
ox
point E. ...
sy

E +
After the first panoramafrom the Erechtheion, let us continue 6.
our way across the Acropolis. At point B the Parthenon is still the
only structurein our field of vision, but if we move on to point
C, it will be so close to us that we shall be unable to encompass
its shape; at that moment the Erechtheion becomes the center of
the panorama. It is precisely from this point that it offers us one
of its most graceful silhouettes (figure 7).

The bare wall (a) is enlivened by the Porch of the Caryatids,


which stand out from it as though against a backgroundspecifi-
cally created for them.
Thus three pictures have passed before us, correspondingto the
three chief points - A1, B, and C - on figure 4.
At each of them only one architecturalmonument was dominant:
at point C, the Erechtheion; at point B, the Parthenon;and at
point A', Athene Promakhos.This one, principal motif ensures
the clarity of the impression and the unity of the picture.

How responsibly and with what careful thought this has


been done is witnessed in the following additional com-
ment by Choisy: 7.

119
_

assemblage 10

Erechtheion and AthenePromakhos. Let us returnto the starting


point(figure4), thatis, to pointA', at whichourwholeattention
wasconcentrated on AthenePromakhos. The Erechtheionwith
One mightfearthatthe grace-
its caryatidsis in the background.
ful caryatids wouldappearcrushedby forceof contrastwiththe
_. I _U to prevent
statueof thegoddess;
gigantic this,thearchitect
sited
the baseof the statuein sucha waythatit shutout the viewof
the Porchof the Caryatids - line A'RL, whichonly revealed
itselfto the eye of the spectatorwhenhe wasso closeto the
colossusthathe couldno longersee all of it, andthereforea
comparisonbecamepossibleonly in memory.
Furthermore,Choisy sums up as follows:
If we now recallthe seriesof picturesthatthe Acropolishasgiven
us, we shallsee thattheyareall, withoutexception,calculated
on the firstimpressionthattheymake.Ourrecollections invaria-
bly takeus backto firstimpressions,andthe Greeksstrove,above
all, to makeit a favorableone.
Bothwingsof the Proplyaeum balanceout at the exactmoment
I, the generalviewof the buildingopensout in frontof us
fW 1-- i/ ^_^^L 4 )when
(figure 3).
^- ^^i-?- -'
_- ltThe disappearance of the caryatids
whenlookingat AthenePro-
tP imakhos is alsocalculatedon the firstimpression(figure4).
As forthe Parthenon,the fullestviewof its facade,withits asym-
o_c f i ^ra I* * I metricalflightof steps,is revealedto the spectatorwhenhe passes
' \ L _ UBH'.
*through
?^^ the precinctaroundthe templeof AtheneErgane.
wasevidentlythe
This creationof a favorablefirstimpression
8. constantconcernof Greekarchitects.
The calculation of a [film-] shot effect is obvious, for
there, too, the effect of the first impressionfrom each new,
emerging shot is enormous. Equally strong, however, is
the calculation on a montage effect, that is, the sequential
juxtapositionof those shots.
Let us, in fact, draw up the general compositionalschemes
of these four successive "picturesqueshots"(figure8).

It is hard to imagine a stricter,more elegant, and more


triumphantconstructthan this sequence.
Shots a and b are equal in symmetryand, at the same
time, the oppositesof each other in spatialextent. Shots c
and d are in mirrorsymmetry,and function, as it were, as
enlargementsof the right-handand left-hand wings of shot

120
Eisenstein

a, then reformingagain into a single, balanced mass. The road that the "twelvestations"have been placed, the ulti-
sculpturalmotif b is repeatedthrough shot c, by the group mate destination ("Golgotha")being the church at the top.
of sculpture d and so on and so on. From "station"to "station"the road ascends a certain num-
ber of meters. The business of climbing that distance is
It would furtherbe of particularinterestto analyze the
particularlyimpressivebecause it is the custom to go from
length of time in which each of these pictures was pre- "station"to "station"and on up to the very top - on one's
sented to the spectator.We will not go into the details of
knees. The emotional reaction from stoppingplace to
this here, but only remarkthat the length of these montage
stopping place thereby increases with the pilgrims'ever-
sequences is entirely in step with the rhythm of the build-
increasingphysical exhaustion. At another place of pil-
ing itself: the distance from point to point is long, and the
time taken to move from one to the other is of a length in grimage (Los Remedios, near Mexico City) this is done not
only kneeling but "blind"- with the eyes blindfolded.
keeping with solemnity. The blindfold is only removed (symbolizing"spiritual
In the "montageplan" of the Athenian Acropolis we find, insight")at the very top.
of course, the same unsurpassedartistryas in other monu-
Having thus turned our attention to Catholicism, via the
ments of antiquity.
pilgrims of Amecameca and ChartresCathedral, I cannot
From a somewhat differentaspect or point of view (and, of help recalling another example of a montage structure
course, a differentquality and scope!) we can find other standing in the center of the Catholic religion, in Rome,
elements of montage in Christian (Catholic) cathedrals. at its very heart: St. Peter's, and in the very heart of that
cathedral, under the famous canopy with its eleven-and-a-
This occurs in one version of what is invariablyfound in half-meters-highcolumns that tower above the high altar
any [Catholic] church: the so-called Stations of the Cross, of the cathedral, the altar at which the pope alone may
that is, the twelve sculpturalgroups representingthe twelve celebrate Mass and then only on the most solemn
stopping places that legend ascribesto the procession to occasions.
Golgotha. The twelve "stations"are placed at certain dis- I refer to the eight representationsin relief of the coat of
tances from each other, usually around the outer ambula-
arms of the Barberinipope, Urban VIII, adorning the two
tory of the cathedral. That is how I have seen them in outer sides of the four plinths of those gigantic columns
ChartresCathedraland a number of others. But in places
that supportthe canopy. Erected in 1633 during the ponti-
of pilgrimage, especially those of mass pilgrimage, they
ficate of Urban VIII and in his honor, the canopy, the
may also be placed outside the cathedral. I had occasion to
see this type of disposition in Mexico - in the pilgrimage columns, and the coats of arms that decorate the plinths
form one of the most spectacularcompositions of that great
center of Amecameca. As with the majorityof Catholic
master Bernini.
churches in Mexico, this church had been built on the site
of an ancient pagan temple. The wise colonizers and mis- These eight identical coats of arms, apparentlymeaning-
sionaries did this so that the new faith should not lose the less, are in reality not only not identical but far from
popularityof an alreadyfamiliar spot and to use the well- devoid of significance.
trodden paths of pilgrimageto other gods for its own,
Catholic purposes. Therefore this church, as many others, These eight coats of arms are eight shots, eight montage
was sited on a high pyramidalhill. The hill is pyramid- sequences of a whole montage scenario. Identical in their
shaped for the simple reason that it is nothing other than a general design, they differ in their component details;and
genuine, but crumbling and overgrownpyramid, artifi- taken together they representa whole drama that unfolds
cially created as prescribedfor the constructionof places of step by step. Both the subject of the drama, which closely
worship in the era of paganism. A winding road has been concerned Urban VIII, and the location of its depiction
laid out around this fairly steep hill, and it is along this within the holy of holies of Catholicism, of which he was

121
assemblage 10

the head, fully justify its descriptionas satira marmorea In this work Guillaume Dellhora has broughttogethera large
tremenda(a tremendous satire in marble). quantityof written and iconographicaldocuments againstclerical-
ism in Mexico, in Latin America in general, and all over the rest
What is happening on these coats of arms? of the world. He supplies the readerwith a complete arsenal
It has been described by several scholars: againstthe Catholic religion ....

This anticlerical struggle, which should be conducted everywhere


Fraschetti, Vida de Bernini.
. . , is particularlynecessaryin Spanish-speakingcountries. No
Gaetano Dossi, El Baldaquino de San Pedro. one can deny that the progressof the Spanish peoples has been
checked by the fact that the Catholic religion has planted itself
G. E. Curatolo, ProfessorLibre de Obstetriciay Ginecolo-
especially deeply in Spanish soil. In Spanish America there have
gia en la Real Universidadde Roma, El arte de Juno been deeds of fanaticismand obscurantismthat recall the Middle
Lucina en Roma: Historia de la obstetriciadesdesus ori- Ages. In Mexico in 1926 we have seen black-cladhordes, tools of
genes hasta el siglo XX, con documentosineditos (Rome, the priests, bathing the country in blood to cries of 'Long live
1901). (I only know the full title in Spanish). Christ the King!'and there are no crimes that these fanaticshave
not committed, fanaticswho at one time numberedthirtythou-
Also in the article by Dr. P. Noury in Chronique medicale
sand and who ragedover the country for three years. That is why
(Paris, 1903). Guillaume Dellhora's courageous, avenging work is of particular
In the book by Dr. G. J. Witkowski, L'Art profane de value in those regions where the tragicwave of clericalism has
not yet subsided. One must rejoice at the great success that this
l'Eglise, ses licenses symboliques,satiriqueset fantaisistes work has had in Latin America and specially in Mexico. (In June
(Paris, 1908). 1929 sales amounted to 2,000 copies; in September,6,4000; in
And, finally, the voluminous work by Guillermo Dellhora, December, 10,300).7
La iglesia Catolica ante la critica en el pensamientoy en el
arte (Mexico City, 1929). I think the reader's curiosity will have been sufficiently
aroused by all these preliminaries, so I will therefore pro-
N. B. All the above-cited authors also refer to much ceed to describe the montage drama of eight sequences
earlier descriptions. Each one describes the same thing,
(shots), which the caustically ironic stone carver Bernini
although each from his own point of view and with a com- engraved in the eight coats of arms on the four plinths of
pletely different purpose. the magnificent columns that support the canopy in St.
The first two try to play down the whole story. The third, Peter's, Rome, over the altar that surmounts the tomb of
Professor Curatolo, writes in order to demonstrate the state the saint.
of seventeenth-century knowledge of - gynecology.
The dimensions, design, and disposition of each coat of
P. Noury writes his 1903 article from a medical stand- arms are identical (see figure 9). They display the heraldic
point. And G. J. Witkowski, in his 1908 pamphlet, attacks device of the Barberini family to which Pope Urban VIII
the Roman church - an attack, it must be said, that belonged: three bees. Above the shield, in the conven-
shows greater interest in shocking stories and mockery than tional decorative curlicues around it, is a woman's head.
in more serious matters, although the author does possess a Beneath the coat of arms is a no less conventional piece of
certain degree of genuine antireligious free thought. ornamentation, whose swirling strands form themselves
into the head of a satyr. The whole is surmounted by a
Finally there is Dellhora, for whom this matter is the cul-
mination of his whole book, which is entirely devoted to papal tiara ("the triple crown"), placed over a huge pair of
the anticlerical and antireligious struggle of modern, intel- crossed keys ("the keys of St. Peter") (see drawing in figure
10).
lectually based atheism.
In Monde, 17 May 1930, Henri Barbusse wrote as follows: Such is the general layout of all eight coats of arms.

122
Eisenstein

Thus far they are all identical and in no way remarkable.


If, however, we startto examine them more carefully, we
shall see that, startingwith the left-hand front plinth, the
expressionon the face of the female head above each
shield changes sharplyfrom shield to shield. From being
calm and contented it passes through all the stages of pain
and terror,until above the eighth coat of arms it returnsto
an expressionof tranquility(although with a slightly differ- 1
ent cast of character).But that is not all. Above the sixth (
shield in the sequence the woman's head suddenly disap-
pears and is replaced by a no less traditionalRenaissance
ornament - a child's head (putto) with wings. Over the
seventh and eighth shields the woman's head returnswith
new and differentfacial expressionson the face. The mask
of a satyron the lower part of the shield also undergoesa
markeddeformation. On the shield the same occurs with
the three bees of the Barberinifamily.
Figure 11 is a plan view of the canopy, showing the layout
of the coat of arms on the plinths of the columns. The
distance along the line a is approximatelysix meters. 7 a
The deformationthat occurs on the surface of the shield r
itself is the most curious of all. Flat at first, beginning with ' J
the second shield its lower part startsto bulge outward, |
until with the sixth shield it "subsides"and remains flat on ^
the last two shields. .. . What can this mean? In the
literal sense, what sort of an allegory is this?

For an explanation, let us turn to any one of the authors


listed above. We shall see that the first two, while not /
denying the fact itself, try to brush it aside with the queru-\
lous remarkthat "these decorations, taken in conjunction 'A
with the coat of arms, could cause some people to weave _
fantasiesand create mysteriousallusions." 10.

What, in fact, are those "allusions,"which far from being y


mysterious, were intentional and evident? 3
What do these eight shields represent"takenin
conjunction"?
The answer is given by, among others, Witkowski. 7
[Theseeightshieldsarepictures]thatexpress,throughthe phy- 1 8
siognomyof a woman,the variousstagesof childbirth.She
relaxesas the wombreleasesits burden. 11.

123
assemblage 10

The shield is topped by a life-sized woman's head, above which people,includingsomeof the mostdistinguished loversof
are the potential crossed keys surmounted by the tiara. archaeology and the fine arts, ignorant it, partbecauseit
are of in
At each crisis in the labor, the expressionof the face changes.
detailof a greatworkof art- the canopyof
is an insignificant
The scene begins on the face of the left-hand front plinth; the
St. Peter's- and in partbecauseits conceptioncannotbe fully
woman's face begins to contract;on the second and following
understood exceptby obstetricians.(El artede JunoLucina)
plinths the features pass through a series of increasinglyviolent The same anatomical precision is confirmed by the draw-
convulsions. Simultaneously, the hair becomes increasinglydis- ings of the head of the satyrthat Dellhora reproduces.
hevelled; the eyes, which at first expressa bearabledegree of suf-
fering, take on a haggardlook; the mouth, closed at first, opens, What is it all about? Whence came the idea for this mon-
then screams with piercing realism. Zola must have been una- umental piece of mockery, placed under the pope's very
ware of this archaeological curiosity, otherwise he would not have nose in the holy of holies of Catholicism in Rome, which
failed to make use of it in his Rome. It would have been at least contains an obvious attackon the Barberinipope, executed
piquant to see the master of literarynaturalismin the presence of alongside the eight coats of arms of his family?And what
such a shrieking example of artisticnaturalism. is the "secret"behind this marble representationof a
Calmness returnsfor a moment in between the pains, but the woman giving birth in eight montage sequences at the base
face still remains in pain, as though numbed, stupefied;then the of the canopy of the high altar of St. Peter's, Rome?
pains come back with greaterintensity, the featurescontract
again, she looks terrifying .... The zealous defendersof Catholicism, of course, immedi-
Finally, comes the delivery:the belly subsidesand the mother's ately have to hand an explanatoryinterpretationof this
head disappears,to give way to a cherubic baby'shead with curly "symbol."One such version is put forwardby Witkowski:it
hair, smiling beneath the unchanging pontifical insignia .... came to him immediately after the firstpublicationof
these observationsin France in 1903. The pen, indeed, is
But that is not all. Below the papal shield, which the artisthas
sculpted in the shape of the torso of a pregnantwoman, there is barely capable of copying these lines - such is the sac-
the head of a satyr, whose lower part representsthe external charine emotion with which they are writtenthat the ink
female genital organs, the anatomical details of which are quite positively runs and smudges the paper.
complete and which undergo changes that occur throughoutthe
Comparethe papacyto a womanwho, in greatpain, is giving
stages of labor. (L'Artprofane, 1:255-56) birthto soulsforGod;fora pope,as forthe restof the Church,it
At this point let us break off Witkowski's overextensive is sometimesa pregnancyanda birththataretrulypainful.What
disappointments,whatopposition,whatstruggles,whatsuffering
description dealing with the lower part of the ornament, do the popeandthe Churchnot endurein orderto bringinto
and, in place of his ribald comments, let us rather turn to the worldchildrenof Grace,in accordancewithholywrit!. . .
the words of Professor E. Curatolo, who deals with the
astounding pictorial accuracy of the entire picture - The Churchis a mother- a sacredmetaphorthatShe cease-
which can perhaps only be appreciated in all its subtleties lesslyaffirms;why,therefore,shouldit be anysurprisethatthe
artistshouldhavepersonifiedHeras a woman,andthathe
by the experienced eye of a gynecologist. This is also his
shouldhaveclothedher in the pontificalinsignia,sincethe pope
explanation for the whole story being little known among incarnates and personifiesher on earth?(L'Artprofane,262)
the wider public.

The title will perhapsarouse the admirationof those who, despite Popularlegend, however, has preserveda quite different
knowing the great masterpiecesof the seventeenth century with
account of this story. Here it is, as it has been recordedby
which Rome is adorned, are ignorantof one of its most original Dr. P. Noury of Rouen, quoting the wordsof Lamberto
creations, revealed by the ingenious artistto those who have some Lelli:
knowledge of the science of obstetrics.
While Urbanwascommissioning the canopyfromthe great
There are few, indeed, who know this original creation by Ber- architect[Bernini],it happenedthata nephewof the pope,prob-
nini that is to be found in the basilica of the Vatican. Many ablyTaddeo- laterto be a cardinal,a generalissimo of the

124
Elsenmlein

Church,and Princeof the Palatine- fell in love witha sisterof 1


one of Bernini'spupilsand madeherpregnant.
As a resultof thisfamilymisfortune,the girl'sbrothercouldthink r
of no othersolutionthanto implorehis Masterto intercedewith
the popeand to savethe situationby a marriage. '" .r ^
Bernini,confidentand sincere,believingthatamongthe children
of Christdifferencesof socialclassoughtnot to prevail,wentto
the popeto askfor justice.
Urbannot only rejectedthe request,he scoldedthe artistforhis 12.
grosspresumption: 'How,Bernini,'saidhe, 'couldyou entertain
such an idea?The pope'snephewmarrythe sisterof a stonema-
son!Not only mustyou nevermentionit again,but thiswoman
mustbe preventedfromimportuningmy nephew.'
Indignant,his conscienceaffronted,the artistreturnedto his
work,and when he witnessedthe painof the unhappymother
and heardthe whimperingof the newborninfant,he sworethis
solemnoath:'The poperefusesto recognizehis own fleshand
blood- the son of a memberof his family!Verywell. Forthe
restof his life, aroundthe altarat whichhe saysMass,in the
midstof the churchfromwhencegoesforththe wordof Christ,
he shallhavethe innocentvictimsforeverbeneathhis eyes:the
motherand the child, naythe veryact of theirmartyrdom.'
Se non e vero e ben'trovatoone might say about this color-
ful anecdote.8 There is, however, one more detail that may
serve to put the finishing touch to its satiricalaccuracyand
verisimilitude. ProfessorE. Curatolo writes,
Butthereis more.A minuteexaminationhas shownus thatin
the papaltiaraon the firstof the sculptures,whichbeginsthe
sequencemimickinga womanin labor,thereis a smallbaby's
face(whichshouldnot be confusedwiththe largefacecarvedin
reliefon the sixthshield)and whichdoesnot figurein anyother
of the seventiaras.
This baby'shead (placed as indicated on the sketch in fig-
ure 12), which is not interpretedby ProfessorCuratolo and
is mistakenlyseen by Witkowskias a miniature version of
the woman's head,9 might be read as something like a
chapter heading or an introductoryepigraphabout the
birth of a new scion of the family that was crowned with
the papal tiara.
Dellhora prefersa more gracious interpretation.
of the
The explanationis logicalandprovidesan interpretation
satireitself.

125
assemblage 10

Aftersculptingthe lastshield,whichin placeof the mother's Antonio, and Don Taddeo . . " is to be found in the
headbearsthe headof the newborninfant,Berninireproduced pamphlet II grossoe idioto Pasquino. In another pamphlet,
this in miniature,placingit abovethe papaltiara,preciselywhere entitled Pasquino'sAnswerto the Beggarwho Askedhim for
a beingbornof the Barberinifamilyshouldfindits logical Alms, he scourgedthe avariceof the pope.
placement.
Ohime!Io non ho quattrino
The pope - on behalf of his nephew - had repudiatedthe
Tutto'I mioe da Barberino!
offspringof his family,and the greatsculptor,assumingthe role
of ministerof justiceand of morality,positionedthe bastard's [Alas,I havenot a farthing;
headabovethe papaltiara,exactlywhereit deservedto be. (La Barberinohas everythingI possess!]
iglesiaCatolica,357) In the rhymed pamphlet Pasquinoe le api he attackedthe
Moreri, in his Grand dictionnairehistorique,ou le melange bees that formed the heraldic emblem of the Barberini
curieux de l'histoiresacreeet profane(Paris, 1759), family.
expresseshis amazement: "It is surprisingthat in a city To the Popeandto his nephews,who go by the nameof those
where the authorities know so well how to shut men's beesthattheybearon theircoatof arms:
mouths, they have not yet found the secret of forcing a Oh Bees,whomheavenhassentdownuponthe soil of
Pasquino:
piece of marble to be silent." Rometo gathernectarto yourhearts'content,showme now
There were, however, attemptsto do so: M. A. Gazeau, in yourwaxand let me tastethe sweethoneythatyou havemade.
his book Les Bouffons (Paris, 1882), shows a picture of the TheBees:Howgreedyyou are!Barbarous warandthe bloodthat
statue of Pasquino in Rome (p. 181), but he claims that its you haveshedon the earthforoursake- thoseshallby your
original was not a tailor but a shoemaker,and writesabout waxandyourhoney.
attemptsthat were made to stop the "marblemouth." If Pasquino himself was an out-and-out antipapist,his
Severalpopestriedwithoutsuccessto suppressthe unbridled name was, however, used by the Catholics themselves for
scurrilousnessof thesesatires,whichat timesdegenerated
into their own pamphleteeringpurposes.There are, for exam-
defamatory libels.Amongothers,AdrianVI (1522-23),who was ple, some no less biting pamphletswrittenby Catholics
stronglyattackedfor a parsimonythatvergedon avarice,resolved attackingthe Calvinists, collected under the general title
to havethe statueremovedand throwninto the Tiber.He was PasseventParisien respondanta Pasquin Romain: De la vie
dissuadedonly when it waspointedout to him thatPasquino de ceux qui sont alles demeurera Geneve et se disent vivre
wouldnot be madedumbby drowning,but wouldrathermake
selon la reformationde l'Evangile:faict en formede Dia-
himselfheardeven moreloudlythanthe frogsin the Pontine
marshes.AdrianVI had the goodsensenot to put his planinto logue (Paris, 1556). These were written in the form of dia-
effect. logues between Pasquino and Passevent,attackingthe
Calvinists in every possible way and "lesgros paillardsde
This was the same Pope Adrian whom the Romans hated leur Eglise, comme Calvin, Farel et Viret."
so much that on the day after his death crowdsof the
Bernini, too, was equally uninhibited in the scope and
populace gathered outside the house of his greatestenemy
and adorned its entrance with the inscription"To the liber- extent of his ideas and in the means of putting them into
ator of the Roman people." effect. Both the boldness of his satireand the central fea-
ture of St. Peter's, into which he was not afraidto plunge
Apartfrom those already mentioned, Pasquino'sattackson the arrowof his sarcasm, are typical of the man. We have
Pope Urban VIII were extremely numerous; Laffontcites a only to recall how, in the guise of portrayingthe mystic
whole series. The targetswere the pope, his family, and ecstasy of St. Teresa (again in the holy of holies of a
especially his nephews. Thus he proposedthat Don Tad- church, in this case Santa Maria della Vittoria),1 [he cre-
deo, the culprit in the "affair"depicted on the plinths of ated] an image of the orgasmicraptureof the great hysteric
the canopy, should be castrated:"CastrateFrancesco, that is unsurpassedin its realism. This was a malicious

126
Eisemntein

joke, aimed at [Pope Urban], who nine years later (by a When PopeUrbanVIIIaskedhim to explainhis work,Bernini
decree of 15 March 1642), under a resolution of the repliedambiguously: 'It concernsyourfamily.'The popeassumed
Council of Trent, issued an instruction urbi et orbi "to thatthe artistwasalludingto the coatof armsof the Barberini
banish from every Christian house all images that are family,but in the artist'smindthatphrasehad a different
obscene, lascivious, and immodest." For all the friendship meaning.
that existed between these two brigands,this [statueof St. The coat of arms remained untouched.
Teresa]was entirely in characterwith the one - Bernini The extent to which this "hint"remained undetected, and
- who was also a great artist. We should not forgetthat
thus preservedthe ornamental coat of arms undamaged, is
both of them were responsiblefor the vandalisticplunder-
confirmed by eyewitnesses. Dr. H. Vigouroux, for
ing of "one hundred eighty-six thousand, three hundred
instance, informed Dr. Witkowskiof a letter on this sub-
ninety-three pounds of bronze"(Larousse,Grand diction-
naire universal)from the portico of the Roman Pantheon. ject from the former'sbrother, the Abbe Vigouroux, writ-
ten from Rome.
"UrbanstrippedFlavian bare in order to enrobe Peter"was
the ubiquitous Pasquino's jocular comment. It was perhaps The drawingspublishedby the Chronique medicalearequite
in "compensation"for this that Bernini, aided and abetted exact,but one mustbe a physicianto see whathe [thecorrespon-
by Urban, disfiguredthe Pantheon of Agrippawith two dent]sawin thoseescutcheons.I haveoftennoticedthem,
Renaissance campanili, or bell towers. Whichever way one becausethey areplacedimmediatelyadjoiningthe tombof St.
considers it, they thoroughly deservedtheir nickname of Peterand St. Paul, only a meteror so abovegroundlevel, and
"Bernini'sasses' ears." Later, artisticgood taste prevailed, everyonecan see them;but it is certainthatno one suspects
and these two "dovecotes"no longer exist, having been anythingunlesshe has been forewarned. When I wentthere,
men and womenwereleaningagainsttheseescutcheons,to hear
demolished; but in 1725 they were still in place, as albums the Massthatwasbeingsaidnearby,andtheysawnothingmore
of architecturaldrawingsmade in that year bear witness. in themthansomeoneor other'scoatof arms.(L'Artprofane,
History, however, has fixed a much worse pair of asses' 262)
ears on the head of Urban VIII -the twin vices of
How these "men and women" behaved, who had noticed
obscurantismand repression.Mankind will never forget
the year 1633, the year in which the canopy over the high nothing until the Roman magazine L'asino (famous for its
anticlerical caricatures)seized upon the materialpublished
altar in St. Peter'swas built. For in the year of its con- in the Chroniquemedicale and opened their eyes to those
struction occurred one of the most shameful moments in ill-fated shields, we may gather from a few of the headlines
the history of Rome and the papacy:in that same year -
on 22 June 1633 - there took place the enforced public printed in that weekly magazine during the year 1903:
recantationof the "prisonerof the Inquisition,"Galileo Consequencesof Revelationson Significanceof the Bernini
Galilei, at which he was made to renounce the "heretical Sculptures
teachings of Copernicus"! IncredibleInfluxof CuriousVisitorsfromall overthe Worldin
Irreverent Pilgrimageto the Cathedralof St. Peter
It is natural that the question should arise, How was it that
no one noticed Bernini's malicious practicaljoke?How The PrimeBasilicaof Christianity turnedinto a Theaterof
Comicand GrotesqueScenes
was it that for many, many years Pope Urban VIII cele-
bratedthe liturgy while beneath his very nose was this Demonstrations, Tumults,Violence
marble lampoon directed against the whole Barberiniclan? The HolyTemplein a Stateof Siege
Again, legend has preserveda referenceto the fact that Measurestakenby the Vatican
certain rumors and suspicions may have arisen. It is in this
The RomanCuriaintendsto coverBernini'scarvedEscutcheons
connection that the pope is said to have questioned Ber-
nini about the decoration of the plinths. P. Noury writes of If we want to find the solution of the riddle as to why this
it thus: hurricane, these tumults were not unleashed earlier, and

127
assemblage 10

why the secret of Bernini's satire in all its fullness was not the montage technique of sequential juxtaposition.In this
revealed sooner, we shall seek the answer in vain from the instance, the medium was not carved marble intended to
popes, from St. Peter, from doctors Noury and Witkowski; last for centuries, but printer'sink on the pages of a satiri-
nor shall we find it beneath the canopy or the boards, with cal magazine - one of those that, like the clouds of
which, apparently,the Roman Curia never did cover up arrowsof a light advance guard, were showereddown
the ill-starredescutcheons of the Barberinifamily. upon the enemy, accompanyinga great popularupsurge,
the firstwave of the movement that was to overthrow
The answer to the riddle lies entirely in that the full pic-
autocracy.
ture, the true "image"of this montage statementonly
emergesin the sequential juxtaposition[of its constituent I am describingthis from memory, on the basis of mem-
"frames"].Each shield, in itself means nothing. Viewed in oirs that I read somewhere, writtenby an old journalist
isolation, it is dumb, But in the joint combination of all who was active in 1905, when it was strictlyforbiddento
eight of them and taken together with the tomb of St. make any referenceto such events as the dispersalof a
Peter and the basilica as a whole, they ring out acrossthe crowd by armed force. How, then, could such a scene be
centuries as a devastatingpamphlet againstthe plunderers conveyed in a magazine?A way around the ban was
and brigandsconcealed beneath the papal tiara. found: two unrelatedpictureswere drawn, in the form of
an initial illuminated letter and a pictorialendpiece to an
In themselves, the pictures, the phases, the elements of the article. In one - a purely cinematographic frame! - were
whole are innocent and indecipherable.The blow is struck shown the legs of a rankof soldiers marching in step; in
only when the elements are juxtaposedinto a sequential another, a confused mass of civilian legs in disorderly
image. The placing of the shields - or rathertheir "dis- retreat.The pictureswere shown to the censor separately,
placing"- around the four plinths, at right angles and at and he saw no objection to passingthese vignettes, each of
six meters distance from each other, together with the need little significance and in any case "harmless"in them-
to walk round the whole vast quadrilateralof the canopy selves, which were, furthermore,shown to him on differ-
and to begin from one particularcorner (the left-hand ent days. On the pages of the magazine, however, they
front pillar) - these are the factorsthat make up the cun- were placed in such a way that they merged into a single
ning separationof the eight montage sequences. Such is image - the dispersal of a crowd - that instantly sprang
the method by which, in the very heart of Catholicism, a to life. The censor had been circumvented. The hint went
most venomous satire on its triple-crownedhead has man- home. The issue of the magazine was confiscatedafter its
aged to remain in encoded form for centuries. appearance.But too late. The name of the censor was
The separationof its elements is the best means of con- Savenkov;the magazine was called Zritel (The spectator).
cealing an image that emerges, or should emerge, from Shebuyev'smagazine Pulemyot(The machine gun) intro-
their sequential juxtaposition. duced "montage"of this kind as an integralpartof its
Here I cannot help recalling an analogous instance. makeup. Over many issues, the role of such montage shots
was played by the front and back covers. The meaning of
Admittedly it is to be found at the other end of the conti-
what they depicted and their full graphicsignificancewere
nent, almost three hundred years later, and in a totally
differentclass context. In one thing, however, it resembles largely revealedby the juxtapositionof the firstand last
the foregoing:here as there it was a means of avoiding the pages.
vigilance of censorship - a censorship no less corrosive The cover of issue three showed "A Russian Sailor"with
than that of the Tsaristgovernment in 1905. In both cases the caption "Russia'sfreedom was born on the sea." The
the method of pulling the wool over the censor's eyes was back cover had the caption "The God-FearingWarriors"
the same. In both cases the principle was the dissociated and showed a galloping detachment of maddened Cos-
display of images that only acquired significance through sacks. The juxtapositionof the two spoke for itself. The

128
Eisenslein

cover of issue four showed Father Gapon, with a crowd Notes avant-garde.His text of 1912 on
of typically Russian faces behind him. The caption was Eisenstein's"Montageand Archi- cubism providesprobablyone of the
tecture"will be included in firstpurely formalist interpretations
"Follow me!" On the back cover was the same caption,
Towardsa Theoryof Montage, vol. of the art of this movement; it also
"Follow me!" but the picture above it showed a crowd of had some influence on the forma-
2 of S. M. Eisenstein: Selected
injured people limping away from a demonstration- and Works,ed. RichardTaylor, forth- tion of the tenets of the Russian
so on. coming from BFI Publishing and formalistschool of literarycriticism
Indiana UniversityPress. It is pub- (trans. in John E. Bowlt, Russian
Zritel also used "montages"of a kind more complex in the lished here with the kind permis- Art of the Avant-Garde:Theoryand
mental juxtapositionlinking them. One drawing, for sion of the British Film Institute. Criticism, rev. ed. [New York:
Thames and Hudson, 1988], 69-
instance, showed twenty-fivedarkfigures, among which it Citations in the text are as given by
was fairly easy to discern Nicholas II, AlexanderIII, sev- Eisenstein. 77). On Burliuk and his relation-
ship with Mayakovskyand other
eral grand dukes, Father John of Kronstadt,and a number 1. This drawinghas not been
members of the Russian avant-
of ministers. The caption read "25 Silhouettes,"followed traced, but a similar argument,
garde, see the memoirs of Benedikt
leading to a work by David Burliuk
by a multiplication sign, then the figure 4. The censor that was clearly markedby his fond-
Livshits, The One and a Half-Eyed
passed the drawing, having failed to notice that it was a Archer,ed. and trans. John E.
ness for children's drawings, can be Bowlt (Newtonville, Mass.: Oriental
cryptogram:the twenty-fiveblack figures multiplied by four found in S. M. Eisenstein, Non- Research Partners, 1977).
made a hundred black figures- a "BlackHundred."The indifferentNature, trans. Herbert
5. Auguste Choisy, Histoire de I'ar-
expressionBlack Hundred thereafterpassed into general Marshall(Cambridge:Cambridge
chitecture, 2 vols. (Paris:Gauthier-
use, although it was strictlyforbiddento use it in print. UniversityPress, 1987), 247-48.
Villars, 1889).
2. Kolomenskoye, now in the
Where architecturalinteriorsare concerned, one might southeasternsuburbsof Moscow, 6. This can often be tested in the
adduce more "direct"examples, taken from other pages in film shots that are not taken "head-
became the summer residence of
the history of architecture, such as the system of rising the Grand Princes of Muscovy in on" but from an angle or on the
1532. The wooden palace referred diagonal. - S.M.E.
vaults in Hagia Sophia, which reveal their scope and
to here was begun in 1667 but has 7. The topic in Dellhora's book
magnificence step by step, or the interplayof arcadesand not survived. that interestsme is set out with a
vaulting in ChartresCathedral, whose calculated magic of wealth of detail and is supplied with
3. The Egyptianpainting has not
sequential montage I have myself admired more than survived. Eisenstein, however,
an exhaustive quantity of photo-
once. graphsand drawings. I recommend
obviously refershere to representa-
tions dating from the New Empire, this book to readersthat are inter-
These examples not only link montage technique with ested in such details, which can be
which were discussed at great length
architecture,they vividly underline the even closer, imme- by Heinrich Schafer in Von dgyp-
recalled here only in very abbrevi-
diate link, within montage, between mise-en-cadreand ated form. - S.M.E.
tischerKunst: besondersder Zei-
mise-en-scene.This is one of the cornerstoneswithout chenkunst(Leipzig, 1919); see 8. "It may not be true but it's a
which not only can there be no understandingof either Principlesof Egyptian Art, English good story."Italian in the original.
translationof 4th ed., ed. Emma
sphere, but still less can there be any planned, consistent Brunner-Trautand John Baines
9. The woman of the first shield
has her mouth closed and is almost
teaching of the art of montage. (Oxford:Clarendon Press, 1974),
smiling; furthermore,the tiara
fig. 190. On spatial renderingin above her is the only one that bears
such representations,see Erwin in the middle of it a female face
Panofsky,Le Perspectivecomme that is also displayinga gracious
formesymbolique,French ed. of smile. - S.M.E.
Perspektiveals symbolischeKunst,
trans. Guy Ballang6 (Paris:Editions 10. "What the barbariansdid not
de Minuit, 1975), 83. do, the Barberinisdid." Latin in the
4. Burliuk, painter and poet, was original.
one of the most importantmembers 11. The facade of this church was
of the pre-revolutionaryRussian decoratedat the expense of Cardi-

129
assemblage 10

nal Scipione Borghese in exchange fourth partsof The Film Sense, with 10. Yve-Alain Bois, "A Picturesque 12. Choisy borrowsdirectly from
for the statue of a hermaphrodite, the respectivetitles of "Synchroni- Stroll around Clara-Clara,"October Piranesiin his L'Art de batir chez
which was found in the nearby gar- zation of Senses"(which bears the 29 (Summer 1984): 33-62. This les Romains of 1874. On this issue
dens of a Carmelite monasteryand El Greco passage),"Color and essay has been reprintedin October: and on Le Corbusier'sinterest in
which adorned a gallery of its Meaning," and "Form and Content: The First Decade (Cambridge, Choisy, explicitly stated in his Sur
courtyard.- S.M.E. Practice." Mass.: MIT Press, 1988), and, with les quatre routesof 1941, see my
4. From the draftof a preface for a postscript,in Ernst-Gerhard Historyof Axonometry,forthcoming
Giise, ed., RichardSerra (New from MIT Press. On the relation-
Cinematisme;quoted by Albera in
his introduction, 7. York:Rizzoli, 1988). ship between Eisenstein and Le
Notes to Introduction Corbusier,see Cohen, Le Corbu-
5. Cf. "Le Mouvement de la cou-
1. Fragmentsof Montage have 11. Jean-LouisCohen has noted sier, 72-74, 150-52, 240-41.
leur" (1939-40), in Sergei Eisen-
alreadybeen published in English, stein, Le Mouvement de l'art, ed. that "Russiais the only country 13. For an account of the historical
under the title "Montage 1938," in Francois Albera and Naum Klei- where a translationof Auguste context of Choisy's discovery, see
The Film Sense, ed. and trans. Jay man (Paris:Editions du Cerf, Choisy's Histoire de l'architecture JacquesLucan, "The Propylaionof
Leyda (New York:HarcourtBrace 1986), 67. The book is a collection was undertaken"(Cohen, Le Cor- the Acropolis in Athens: An Archi-
Jovanovich, 1942), and in S. M. of essays dealing with the relation- busieret la mystiquede l'URSS: tectural Mystery,"Daidalos 15
Eisenstein, Notes of a Film Director ship between literatureand cinema. Theorieset projetspour Moscow (March 1985):42-56, and Richard
(1958; New York:Dover Publica- [Brussels:Mardaga, 1987], 52;
6. Although I use the correct title Etlin, "Le Corbusier,Choisy, and
tions, 1970). A more substantial English translationforthcoming French Hellenism: The Search for
section was published in S. M. given to the essay by RichardTay- from Princeton ArchitecturalPress).
lor in the new English edition of a New Architecture,"Art Bulletin
Eisenstein, Izbrannye proizvedeniia, The firstvolume of the translation
Eisenstein'swritings, Selected 69, no. 2 (June 1987): 264-78.
vol. 2 (Moscow: Iskusstvo, 1964). appearedin 1906, the second in Viollet-le-Duc's statementsabout
"Montageand Architecture"first Works,vol. 1, Writings 1922-1934, 1907, and this book, which was Le
ed. and trans. RichardTaylor (Lon- Greek dissymmetrycan be found in
appearedin the Italian edition of Corbusier'sbible, had some impact the firstvolume of his Entretiens,
Eisenstein's writings, Teoriagener- don and Bloomington: BFI Publish- on the formation of constructivist Lectureson Architecture,trans.
ale del montaggio (Venice: Marsilio, ing and Indiana UniversityPress, architects. Eisenstein was, in fact,
1988), 24, I preferto cite Jay Ley- Benjamin Bucknall (New York:
1985), 78ff. I am grateful to Fran- not the only Russian member of the Dover Publications, 1987), 88-90,
cois Albera for locating and provid- da's translationin S. M. Eisenstein,
avant-gardeto be struckby Choisy's 252-55.
ing me with Eisenstein's text while Film Form: Essays in Film Theory
analysis of the Acropolis:again
I was workingon Choisy. (New York:HarcourtBrace Jova- 14. Auguste Choisy, "Note sur la
accordingto Cohen, Moisei Ginz-
novich, 1949), 28, as it is more burg redrewthe illustrationsin his courburedissymetriquedes degres
2. "El Greco y el cine" (ca. 1937), available to readers.
in S. M. Eisenstein, Cinematisme: Rhythm in Architectureof 1923. qui limitent au couchant la plate-
7. See KasimirMalevich, "And In 1938 L'Art de bdtir chez les forme du Parthenon,"in Compte-
Peinture et cinema, ed. Franqois
Romains was also translatedinto rendu des seancesde l'Academiedes
Albera and trans. Anne Zouboff Images Triumph on the Screens"
(1925), trans. Troels Andersen, in Russian, but Cohen has convinc- inscriptionset belles-lettres(Paris,
(Brussels:Editions complexe, 1980),
16-17. Hubert Damisch mentions KasimirMalevich, Essays on Art ingly arguedthat this time the 1865), 413-16. Choisy's presenta-
(New York:Wittenborn, 1971), move was in part directed, oddly tion was favorablyreceived by
this essay (and the reference to
226-32. Hittorff.
Choisy) in connection with Le Cor- enough, against Le Corbusier(Le
busier's "storyboards" for his plans 8. Paul Klee, PedagogicalSketch- Corbusier,259): This late edition 15. Cf. the famous passagefrom Le
for Algiers and Rio in his Precisions book (1925), trans. Sibyl Moholy- of Choisy's work formed part of a Corbusier'sOeuvrecompletethat
sur un etat presentde l'architecture Nagy (New York:F. A. Praeger, strategyof the global presentationof deals with the promenadearchitec-
et de l'urbanismeof 1930 and La French rationalismintended to turale and the Villa Savoye:"Arab
1960), 33.
Ville radieuseof 1935. See Da- demonstratethat Le Corbusier,who architecturehas much to teach us.
9. S. M. Eisenstein, "Piranesi,or had played a major role on the It is appreciatedwhile on the move,
misch, "Les Treteaux de la vie mo-
The Fluidity of Forms," trans. Russian architecturalscene, was not with one's feet; it is while walking,
derne," in Le Corbusier:Une
RobertaReader, Oppositions 11 the sole voice (cf. the translationof
Encyclopedie(Paris:Centre Georges moving from one place to another,
(Winter 1977): 84-110. See also Viollet-le-Duc's Entretiens sur l'ar- that one sees how the arrangements
Pompidou, 1987), 253-55.
ManfredoTafuri'scommentary in chitecturein 1937; the translationof of the architecturedevelop. This is
3. "VerticalMontage"was first the same issue, "The Dialectics of Giedion's Bauen in Frankreich, a principle contraryto Baroque
published in Izbrannye proizveden- the Avant-Garde:Piranesi and which presentedPerretas its hero, architecture"(Oeuvrecomplete
iia in 1940. It is translatedby Eisenstein," 74-80, and Mario in the same year;and the republica- 1929-1934 [Zurich:Editions Girs-
Leyda as the second, third, and Gandelsonas'sshort postscript,81. tion of Choisy's Histoire in 1935). berger, 1964], 24).

130
Eisenstein

16. "It is . . . an architecturethat Figure Credits


is intended to enclose and shelter
Frontispiece:Photographby
human beings in a psychic sense, to Leonardvon Matt.
order them absolutely so that they
can always find a known conclusion Figures 1-12 are reprintedfrom
at the end of any journey, but Eisenstein'soriginal essay. Figure
referencesin the text are as given in
finally to let them play at freedom
and action all the while. Everything the original.
worksout; the play seems tumul-
tuous but nobody gets hurt and
everyone wins. It is . . . a maternal
architecture[that]creates a world
with which, today, only children, if
they are lucky, could identify"(Vin-
cent Scully, Modern Architecture:
The Architectureof Democracy
[New York:Braziller, 1965], 10).
17. See Philipp Fehl, "The
'Stemme' on Bernini's Balacchino
in St. Peter's:A Forgotten Compli-
ment," Burlington Magazine 118,
no. 880 (July 1976): 484-91. For
Fehl, who does not dwell on any of
the authors mentioned by Eisen-
stein, Bernini's sequence "celebrates
the advent of the Barberinipapacy."

131

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