DOCUMENT
UFD005
Kristen Alvanson
Timothy Morton
Manabrata Guha
Reza Negarestani
Kenna Hernly Robin Mackay
China Miéville
Matthew Poole Eugene Thacker
The Real and the Sublime
For the event The Real Thing, Urbanomic brought together
a group of writers to create new interpretative labels for
the set of paintings grouped under the title Art and the
Sublime at Tate Britain
INTRODUCTION
TURNER, ‘SHIPWRECK’
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
Speculative Realist philosophy asks how thought
can access a reality that endures before, after, and
without the human, a reality which the ‘sublime’ encounter with powers that exceed the capacity of
the imagination also gestures towards.
Romantic theories of the sublime subordinate this
traumatic encounter to a human economy—we witness our own extinction only long enough to yield a
measure of ‘delight’ that consolidates our subjective
integrity. However, in rearticulating the notion of the
sublime during a period of theological uncertainty,
scientific discovery and economic expansion, artists
brushed up against an irrevocably weird ‘outside’
that disrupts this integrity: the contingency of death,
the indifference of secularised nature, and the empty aeons of earth-history in which humanity itself is
a contingent and vanishingly small episode.
Here, depiction begins to give way to a distribution
of forces that retains or repeats something of the
traumatic experience. One scarcely needs to register the subject of the painting to experience the
restless, queasy motion induced by Turner’s arrangement of colour and intensity.
Behind the depiction of the sublime, Urbanomic’s collaborative interpretations uncover a ‘complicity with
anonymous materials’. The subjective experience of
the sublime is understood as the mark of an intrusion
into human culture of a weird ‘outside’. The real presses
upon human consciousness, forcing thought to behold
its own contingency in ever more precise and appalling ways. Where the romantic conception continues to
express conflicting tendencies of the organism—the
will to inundation and the resistance against incorporation—SR encompasses the production of these drives
as one contingent reality amongst others.
The shipwreck scene has been untethered from the
shore, which for earlier painters provided a stage
populated with a chorus of figures reacting to the
unfolding tragedy. Painting is also discovering an
autonomy from representation: its dynamic relationship to the eye belongs to the same anonymous,
turbulent nature it depicts.
Painting is then ‘of’ the sublime not in a representational sense, but in the sense that the sublime, as a
particular disposition of forces, takes hold of it and
works it from within. [RM]
1
TURNER, ‘A DISASTER AT SEA’
religion that follow them, are complicit with a militarism that they continue to express even in this
peaceful scene.
The valley forms a defensive moat around the fortified city of Jerusalem. With the settlement on the
other side of the valley as a first line of defence and
reconnaissance, this entrance was often left unguarded during the Crusades. Armies avoided the
area as its water was contaminated by the corpses of
Jews, Christians and Muslims interred on the slopes
awaiting the Last Judgment. The small stone wall recalls that the valley also served as a quarry, supplying
the city with stone for fortifications. [RN/RM]
WARD, ‘GORDALE SCAR’
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
Formally, the painting takes advantage of an invisible
horizon line—which would, were this a painting of a
placid, calm sea, coincide with the horizon of the sea
itself. This invisible horizontal line is frenetically bisected
by the jagged, incongruous, vertical line of the clashing
waves in the center of the painting. In this zig-zagging
motif, we see not only the waves colliding, but the debris of the ship, and glimpses of the bodies engulfed by
the waves. This bisecting, erratic, ‘savage’ line blurs all
boundaries: bodies become waves, the sea becomes
the sky. This con-fusion of all boundaries, melding
wood, flesh, and water, approaches the kind of pantheistic Naturphilosophie one finds in Schelling or Novalis.
By effectively effacing the classical horizon line, was
Turner also making a comment on the unbridled vitality
of romanticism versus the static fixity of classicism? [ET]
In his ‘Tour to the Caves’ (1781) Geologist John Hutton
describes how a descent into Gordale Scar triggered
the sublime struggle between reason and fear:
SEDDON, ‘JERUSALEM AND JEHOSAPHAT’
The idea for personal safety excited some awful
sensations accompanied with a tremor. The mind
is not always able to divest itself of prejudices and
unpleasing associations of ideas: Reason told us
that this rock could not be moved … We stood too
far under its margin to be affected by any crumbled
descending fragment, and a very small one would
have crushed us to atoms, if it had fallen upon us;
yet in spite of reason and judgment, the same unpleasing sensations of terror ran coldly through our
veins, which we should have felt, if we had looked
down, though secure, from its lofty top.
Seddon’s meticulous realism unwittingly reveals how
in this landscape, geology and topography, together with the patterns of settlement, agriculture and
With his massive, highly manipulated rendering of
the ‘awful, great and grand’ scene, Ward aims to
further ‘heighten’ this experience. [RM]
2
ROSSETTI, ‘BEATA BEATRIX’
MILLAIS, ‘THE VALE OF REST’
In Millais’s intensification of the poetic association
between the end of day and the end of life, sublime
elements of nature become a cue for a more inward
reflection.
Unlike the Burkean sublime, where the picture plane is
a distancing, protective screen, here the uncomfortable intimacy of the seated figure’s gaze directly involves
the viewer so as to pass from this singular moment to
a universal reflection. The sublime becomes an appalling, private affair, an obscenity—Ruskin condemned
the work as ‘repulsive and ignoble’. Like a prurient voyeur, we are admitted to witness our own eventual absence—our own death. [RM/TM]
The painter arrests Beatrice at the impossible moment of death—the moment that may be said to
define the structure of human experience, but is
precisely the one thing we can never experience. In
the moment of apotheosis, she would become completely, perfectly herself—but what is this if not to
become an object?
Saving her from this fate, beatification allows
Beatrice, although she has passed out of the sphere
that delimits human experience, to contemplate her
own death, bringing it into the purview of life’s possibilities (‘the new life’).
MILLAIS, ‘THE NORTHWEST PASSAGE’
Where death could be seen as sublime because it
is an abrupt irruption of an alien contingency irrespective of the laws and possibilities of the subject,
Rossetti instead sublimates personal death into a
life-event. [RN /RM /TM]
The sublime—the vast, uncharted and hostile realm,
alluded to through the maps and charts, weighs
3
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
There is nothing especially awe-inspiring or terrible
about the scene itself. The painting is almost photographic in its arresting of a singular, snapshot
moment—the onset of dusk, the awkwardly frozen
pose of the digging nun.
Awareness of the gap between optical phenomena
and underlying reality gives a new sense to St Paul’s
suggestion that the human soul reflects reality ‘as
if in a mirror darkly’; later painters would no longer
seek to calibrate their depictions to suppress this
disparity, instead entering into various examinations
of the mechanisms of seeing. [KA /RN /RM]
visibly on the faces of the two figures. The viewer,
placed in the line of the captain’s inward gaze, takes
on the burden of the invisible nonhuman real around
which the scene revolves—an icy obstacle that has
already claimed lives, and which the human spirit
must overcome.
The captain’s defiant determination that the quest
for the Northwest Passage must continue is reflected in Millais’s subtitle: ‘it might be done, and England
should do it’. This entreaty reflects a belief in divine providence against profane contingency—The
earth must prove to be passable ‘for us’ rather than
an inhospitable set of tectonic and glacial fragments.
But its nationalism combines this with a logic of economic accumulation—exploration driven by the imperatives of constant expansion and full exploitation
of the earth. [RM /TM]
COLLIER, ‘LAST VOYAGE OF HENRY HUDSON’
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
LEIGHTON, ‘AND THE SEA GAVE UP THE DEAD
WHICH WERE IN IT’
Cast adrift by those whose instinct for self-preservation overcame the imperative of opening new
frontiers for knowledge and profit, Hudson is shown
with his hand still on the tiller. We are placed in the
boat floating passively towards its inevitable fate,
together with the few remaining crew who did not
mutiny against him.
Hudson’s stoically resigned gaze mediates between
the boy’s uncertain questioning of the situation and
the glassy vacancy of the dead or dying man. In his
radical passivity, Hudson’s iron will becomes one
with the real that now steers his fate.
The ascension of the resurrected family, as they rise
from their watery grave, diverges strangely from the
vertical, possibly because of the painting’s intended
location.
The strange rendering of the boy’s eyes and his inappropriate clothing suggest that he may in fact be a
spectre, and Hudson the last survivor. [RM/TM/KH/MP]
During the renaissance, widely-read technical manuals tackled the problems of perspective for paintings executed on curved surfaces such as the dome
of St Pauls, drawing on the sciences of mirror and
lens images—catoptrics and dioptrics. In Leighton’s
era, these sciences had been revolutionised by new
mathematics and sophisticated instruments.
4
LANDSEER, ‘THE HUNTED STAG’
TURNER, ‘CONISTON FELLS’
Aligning in one grand flow sky, mountain, stream,
hunter and quarry, Landseer casts the viewer as
the lone sportsman face-to-face with nature. But
the solitude of this encounter was a luxury brutally
achieved.
Turner pays close attention to Milton’s words. One
of several references to ‘exhalation’, the passage
concerns itself above all with the glory of the cyclical, living nature of creation: the rising and falling of
water in the atmosphere is seen as a form of prayer:
Choreographing nature itself into alignment with
this new mythos, Landseer tells us little of the real
political and economic forces that made it possible.
[RM /KH]
Ye Mists and Exhalations, that now rise
From hill or steaming lake, dusky or gray,
Till the sun paint your fleecy skirts with gold,
In honour to the world’s great Author rise;
Whether to deck with clouds the uncoloured sky,
Or wet the thirsty earth with falling showers,
Rising or falling still advance his praise.
Appropriately, Turner gives us a comprehensive portrait of the water cycle: stratus clouds rise from the
peaks, to become cirrus clouds, and form cumuli as
they descend, precipitating as rain into the springs,
mountain streams and waterfalls. All that is missing
is the ocean. [RM]
5
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
The Highland Clearances saw thousands of tenants
moved to the lowlands as a cheap labour force or
forced to emigrate. Traditional territorial attachments
were severed, but the low-maintenance, high-profit
sheep farming which replaced them declined. Now
effectively a wasteland, the Highlands were reconstructed into aristocratic sporting estates, free to
be ‘rebranded’ as a site of sublime mythical tradition
and natural might.
WATTS, ‘CHAOS’
WATTS, ‘HOPE’
Order is a perennial concern of Western philosophy and art. But for both, disorder is a more vexing
problem. Watts, a self-styled ‘thinker in paint’, compromises by placing disorder within an orderly transition from ‘chaos to cosmos’.
Science now tells us that ‘chaos’ is not simply disorder, but an order lying beyond our perceptual capacities. It is no longer a question of ordering a representation of disorder; but of presenting structures
that do not obey our inbuilt aesthetic sense of order.
At this point aesthetics diverges from philosophy,
and it becomes yet more difficult to be a ‘thinker in
paint’. [ET/RM]
In his essay ‘Spectral Dilemma’, philosopher Quentin
Meillassoux addresses the theological problem
of hope, in the face of the multitude of senseless
deaths that occur in the world. If God does not exist,
and we can hope for no redemption for the dead,
then we can only despair. Conversely, any justice
the dead might receive in the afterlife would be justice dispensed by the very God who allowed their
senseless suffering—a perverse and cruel deity.
Meillassoux’s speculative solution to this dilemma
reignites hope with the thought that God’s non-existence harbours the possibility of a God yet to come.
This emergence of God from a ‘divine inexistence’ is
thinkable when we accept Meillassoux’s argument
that the laws of nature as we know them are not
necessary, but absolutely contingent. Only reason’s
discovery of this paradoxical truth can ground hope.
[RM]
6
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
The progressive ‘stratification’ of the central flux implies a geological model. But geology has no scale
from order to disorder—only endless foldings and
refoldings of matter, an ordering which no longer
requires the opposing pole of disorder. Perhaps
this is why Watts’s desultory image of chaos has
little force.
WATTS, ‘THE ALL-PERVADING’
HUNT, ‘THE TRIUMPH OF THE INNOCENTS’
In the accompanying pamphlet at the Fine Art
Society in 1885 Hunt explained:
[T]he flood upon which the spiritual children advance forms a contrast to the stream they cross
[…] [This flood is] the stream of eternal life…Instead
of being dissipated in natural vapour, the play of
its wavelets takes the form of airy globes […].
Like all of Watts’s major paintings, this was probably
destined for his ‘House of Life’—a Sistine Chapellike great hall on whose surfaces Watts dreamt of
portraying a universal metaphysical allegory taking
in cosmic creation, biblical history, the ‘ages of man’
and the progress of civilisation.
For Hunt, it is the non-homogeneity of the stream
of eternal life that enables earthly water to form the
mystical airy globes. His friend Millais endorsed a
more prosaic solution: the sublime agent that preserves the fragility and lightness of this figure of purity and innocence, is Pears’ Soap. [RN /RM /KH]
Consonant with this vision – that of a grand systematiser—Watts may here be declaring that a universal order, a unifying sense, still overlooks the turbulence of a society uprooted by industrialisation, war,
and continued imperial sorties into the undiscovered
recesses of the earth. With Watts’s characteristic
ambiguity, however, this ‘spirit’—depicted less numinously in another version, writing upon a parchment spread on the top of the globe—seems either
dormant, blind or eyeless. [KH /RM]
7
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
Hunt’s artistic solution to a theological problem
owes something to contemporary research into the
interaction of liquids: to stabilise water bubbles, another liquid or insoluble gas is required to decrease
the surface tension and prevent them from evaporating or dissipating into the air.
TURNER, ‘DEATH ON A PALE HORSE’
Blake depicts Satan using Greek aesthetic devices:
the genital area is rendered unclearly, with the penis
small; and the feet have a longer second toe, a trait
associated with royal blood and nobility.
Resisting the movement from the sublime personification of death (of which Milton is the last great
poet) to the sublimation of personal death (where
death figures as a singularity or apotheosis for the
individual), Turner instead produces a sickly vortex
of dissolution where even the symbolic personage
of Death, swordless, is contorted and swallowed up,
along with its steed.
The anatomical condition ‘Greek Foot’ is now recognised as an atavistic evolutionary trait: the longer
second toe gave early bipeds the leverage to ‘walk’
up tree trunks. Our ape ancestors’ final transition to
an upright gait was enabled by a larger and stronger
big toe, and a shorter second toe.
This turbulent and vaporous maelstrom may owe
something to the fear and public panic attendant
upon the cholera epidemic which was raging in India,
stirred up in the Bengal swamps by British colonial trade and troop movements, and was creeping
westward soon to reach British shores, provoking
biblical pronouncements (‘one of the most terrible
pestilences which have ever desolated the earth’).
Testing the understanding of progress and the
meaningfulness of natural events, this dread prospect may have inspired Turner’s new conception of
death. [KA /RM /RN]
In his fidelity to a tradition of sublime anatomical figuration, Blake’s visual translation of the biblical text
harbours an ailment more serious than boils, and a
more troubling, Darwinian, test of faith: even Satan
is reduced to a primate shaped by a blind and indifferent genetics. [KA /RN /TM /MG /RM]
8
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
BLAKE, ‘SATAN SMITING JOB
WITH SORE BOILS’
WILSON, ‘LLYN-Y-CAU, CADER IDRIS’
The depiction of the amphitheatre-like pool as an
ominous ‘black hole’ repeats the common belief that
Llyn-y-cau is an extinct volcano and is therefore
connected to the bowels of the earth. Local folklore
that anyone who sleeps near this bottomless lake is
driven mad or becomes a poet.
From John Playfair, Illustrations of the Huttonian
Theory of the Earth, 1822:
Nature supplies the means of tracing with considerable certainty the migration of fossil bodies
on the surface of the earth […] the most powerful engines without doubt which nature employs
are the glaciers…The necessity of introducing […]
any other unknown agent, to account for the
transportation of fossils, seems to arise from
underrating the effects of action long continued,
and not limited by such short periods as circumscribe the works, and even the observations,
of men.
BRETT, ‘GLACIER OF ROSENLAUI’
From William Paley, Natural Theology, 1802:
Ironically, during theologist William Paley’s own lifetime, the discovery of certain stones would challenge the creationist implications of his ‘watchmaker
analogy’.
In crossing a heath, suppose I pitched my foot
against a stone, and were asked how the stone
came to be there: I might answer, that for all I
know, it had lain there for ever…But suppose I
had found a watch…we perceive (what we could
not discover in the stone) that its several parts
are framed and put together for a purpose
[…] the watch must have had a maker […] who
formed it […] comprehended its construction,
and designed its use […] It is the same in Nature.
The various stones deposited in the foreground are
what are now known as ‘glacial erratics’. Realising
that these stones had been displaced by the formation and melting of glaciers led scientists to conclude that physical forces had slowly shaped the
earth over millennia; a conclusion that in turn would
inspire Darwin’s vision of the ‘incomprehensibly vast’
timescale of evolution. These scattered stones pose
the question: How did we get here?
9
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
The volcanic hypothesis, whose mythical associations Wilson reinforces, is mistaken. In fact, the lake
is the product of the last ice-age—a melted remnant of the catastrophic Holocene extinction. The
blackened areas inside the bowl, which recall earlier
depictions of the lake-entrance to Hades, are not
volcanic rock, but parts of the cirque glacial where
the eroded soil can no longer support life. Llyn-y-cau
is a silent marker of extinction, formed neither by a
spectacular eruption nor by the catastrophic advent
of a meteorite (two faces of the sublime), but by the
slow glacial erosion of the landscape. [RN /RM /TM]
Although the work evokes the ‘fractal’ confusion of
scale suggested by Ruskin, underlying this aesthetic is the sublime insight that both rock and ice are
arrested flows, flows whose tremendous force and
slowness requires a rethinking of our everyday understanding of physical cause, time, complexity and
design. [RN /RM]
BLAKE, ‘THE GHOST OF A FLEA’
DADD ‘THE FLIGHT OUT OF EGYPT’
He escaped England only to be arrested in France
for attempting to cut another man’s throat, overcome by the belief that he was driven by ‘the will of
mighty Osiris’, the ancient Egyptian deity—A textbook case of the paranoid schizophrenic whose ‘actions may be quite unpredictable, being controlled,
as it were, by a third party’.
Dadd continued his work as an inmate at London’s
Bethlem insane asylum (‘bedlam’). This inexplicable painting hyperbolises the subject of the oasis
as crossing point of many stories—parts with no
whole. It portmanteaus memories of Dadd’s travels
with multiple geographical and historical incongruities, and perhaps also recalls the delirium of sunstroke which reputedly triggered his ‘nervous illness’
and subsequent flight. [RM]
10
From G.K. Chesterton, ‘William Blake’, 1920:
Every great mystic goes about with a magnifying
glass […] It will not be denied that Blake shows the
best part of a mystic’s attitude in seeing that the
soul of a flea is ten thousand times larger than a
flea. But the really interesting point is much more
striking. It is the essential point upon which all
primary understanding of the art of Blake really
turns. The point is this: that the ghost of a flea is
not only larger than a flea, the ghost of a flea is
actually more solid than a flea. The flea himself
is hazy and fantastic compared to the hard and
massive actuality of his ghost.
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
After showing increasing signs of mental instability upon his return from travels in the Middle East,
Dadd murdered his father in the belief that he was
an ‘enemy of god’.
FUSELI, ‘LADY MACBETH SEIZING
THE DAGGERS’
The first figure, petrified, prays for deliverance from
death. Fleeing, the second half turns back, fascinated by the magnitude of the disaster. But the third,
at a comfortable distance, stands confidently, and
points us toward the sublime spectacle.
Both figures hesitate on the verge of the fathomless
darkness their murderous act has summoned, and
whose insomniac presence forms the centre of the
image.
Enveloping Lady Macbeth like flowing matter, indistinguishable from the fabric of her dress, the light
resists her dramatic diagonal thrust, pinning her
down and dragging her arm back as she strains to
burst free and commune recklessly with the darkness. Macbeth recoils at the irrevocable nature of
his act, a skeletal leg pulling against the muscle of
his recalcitrant shoulders, the daggers poised as if
he is considering plunging them into his own limb,
an act that would impede his abandonment to the
night.
HOGARTH, ‘SATAN, SIN AND DEATH’
Not yet quite at the point of absolute complicity with
the material force of the act, the two human agents
are trapped in a moment that is situated both before and after (sub-) the undifferentiated force of
the darkness (limen). [MP/RM]
Hogarth’s response to a text that was exemplary for
the modern theory of the sublime can be seen as a
study in the problematic transition from a ‘rhetorical’
(Longinian) to a ‘visual’ (Burkean, Ruskinian) sublime.
DE LOUTHERBOURG, ‘AN AVALANCHE
IN THE ALPS’
The three human figures dwarfed by de
Loutherbourg’s catastrophic avalanche offer a clear
visual analogy for Burke’s suggestion that terrifying,
potentially fatal phenomena, when seen at a distance, can be the source of a unique kind of ‘delight’.
Burke describes in rather painterly terms Milton’s ‘significant and expressive uncertainty of strokes and
colouring’ in the description of Death, ‘dark, uncertain,
confused, terrible, and sublime in the last degree’; but
little remains in Hogarth’s painting of this ominous uncertainty, forced as he is to find figurative form for the
horror of Milton’s evocative words. [TM /RM]
11
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
Given his experience in innovative theatrical technologies, de Loutherbourg would have been quite familiar
with this production of delight through the dramatic
presentation of danger without real risk. [RM]
DANBY, ‘THE DELUGE’
The appropriately biblical proportions of Danby’s canvas index a purely commercial economy of scale: like
many of his works, ‘The Deluge’ was commissioned
with a view to taking it on tour.
artillery technology and a greater mobility of ships
changed the dynamic of sea battles significantly,
rendering the spectacle of violence equal to that of
sublime natural phenomena, as suggested by the
merging of seafoam, clouds and gunsmoke here.
Regular news of such battles effected a shift in
painting, from theatrical depictions of shipwrecks
from the shore, with a chorus of lamenting onlookers with whose reactions the audience could sympathise, to more direct and even gory images of the
horrors of war. Tuned to reinforce nationalist sentiment, de Loutherbourg’s images intensified this
tendency. [RM]
DE LOUTHERBOURG,
‘THE BATTLE OF THE NILE’
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
In the nineteenth century, early art entrepreneurs realised that the capital invested in producing an awesomely powerful and finely detailed painting such as
this would be repaid at the box office, as paintings
travelled from town to town and audience members
paid to sit and thrill at the sublime scenes.
This one-frame disaster movie pioneers a key economic-cultural complex: Access to the sublime’s promise of
transcendence can only be reliably secured by participating in the distributed consumption of a capital-intensive cultural product. [RM]
This victory was also a key moment in the re-imagining of war as a rival to the sublimity of nature: A
historical account records how the flagship L’Orient
was blown apart by a series of massive explosions
and ‘remained blazing like a volcano in the middle
of the combat, rendering, for a time, the dreadful
spectacle visible’.
DE LOUTHERBOURG,
‘THE BATTLE OF CAMPERDOWN’
The ship’s crew had been busy painting it at the
time since the Captain, Brueys, was confident that
Nelson would not attack at night. When they finally saw the advancing British warships, the crew of
L’Orient hurriedly manned their posts, leaving the
body of the ship wet with paint and open containers of turpentine on deck, which served to spread
the fire to the lower deck where incendiaries were
stored. The ‘volcanic’ blaze that rendered the scene
so eminently paintable was itself fuelled by paint.
[RN /RM]
Between the beginning of the Seven Years’ War
and the Battle of Trafalgar, the second half of the
eighteenth century in Europe saw almost continual
sea warfare, driving a refinement and development
of ever more devastating weaponry. More complex
12
TURNER, ‘FISHERMEN AT SEA’
the city gates of London, and beheld the inhabitants
tearing each others’ flesh in the most horrible manner, and I heard a voice speak to me, “In one day
this city shall be burnt to the ground.”’ His drawing of this sublime moment of divine vengeance,
entitled ‘London’s Overthrow’, is in the archive of
Bethlem Hospital.
A similar fate seems to await dwellers in the City of
Heaven, whose lording over the slide into hot darkness is about as convincing and comforting as a
house on a crumbling shale cliff. Martin’s painting
thus repeats his brother’s warning that apocalypse
is inevitably invited by mankind’s insufficient awe for
the sublime. [CM /RM]
MARTIN, ‘THE PLAINS OF HEAVEN’
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
The nocturnal fishermen trade one contingent regime of peril for another: fish move closer to land at
high tide, under the full moon’s gravitational influence, and nearer to the surface at night. The fishermen are able to maximise their yield whilst reducing
their exposure to the dangers of deep sea fishing.
But the murky light of the moon and tidal turbulence
expose them instead to wreckage on the land and
rocks.
Turner bases this work on an early naturalistic moonlight study of the Thames painted from Millbank and
his observation of fishermen at Margate. In order to
heighten the scene to the level of a tense meditation
on the fishermens’ situation, he introduces extraneous
elements from the popular maritime imagination, including the seagulls on the shoreline, whose presence
at night is highly incongruous. [RN/RM]
The real heirs of the ‘Martinian’ style were without
doubt twentieth-century painters such as Chris
Foss, whose airbrushed visions of spaceships, floating cities and distant planets reprise the principles of
the sublime at a new order of magnitude inspired by
modern astronomy and space exploration, but are
distributed on the intimate scale of a paperback or
record cover.
MARTIN, ‘THE LAST JUDGMENT’
The painter’s older brother Jonathan, known as ‘Mad
Martin’, was convicted of arson in 1829 after setting
fire to York Minster. His hatred for the laxity of the
established church culminated in Romeroesque visions of apocalypse: ‘I dreamed that I was called to
Chris Foss, Travelling Cities (1981)
13
civilisations that embarrass any claims to eternity offered by either the European or the newly exuberant
American state West knew well. But what is key is
not that the human is constituted by these landmasses, but that both human and landmasses are
deformed by that constitution. [CM]
The exclusion of such ‘genre’ artists from the artistic canon confirms that the aspirational vector from
landscape to history painting that characterised the
sublime ends in ridicule, with a relegation to the category of kitsch. But the supposedly ‘juvenile’ and
‘escapist’ impulses of such work belong to a perennial and culturally crucial realist instinct: to use imaginative experiment to render compelling and forceful
the notion of entities and worlds radically external to
our mundane experience. [RM]
STUBBS, ‘HORSE DEVOURED BY A LION’
WEST, ‘THE BARD’
The painting’s structure heightens the contrast between our sympathetic emotional reaction to this
sublime drama of life and death, and nature’s universal sanction of such cruelty.
Often read in terms of heraldic symbolism, perhaps
it is the cold, distant aristocratic gaze of nature that
this image is daring the viewer to assume. [RM/TM/KH]
The sublime here is in the incommensurability between the human and the planetary scale of geology, intersecting with political guilt – an anthropo-politico-tectonic tension. The figure is constructed
by the imperfect tesellating of continental blocs:
The curve of negative space under his right arm
describes, with startling accuracy, the coastline
of South America; his robe below the waist an enthinned Africa. The two ‘old continents’ coagulate
an unconvincing human figure into existence between them.
The noble self-martyrdom of Wales against an aggressive metropole is uneasily echoed by the constitution of the apparent subject by these jostling
and ill-tempered landmasses, both homes of antique
14
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
Stubbs exhibits nature as simultaneously serene
and harmonious, and ‘red in tooth and claw’. Free of
overdramatisation, the tranquil background scene
answers with indifference to the horse’s distress as
the lion, emerging from the cave’s recessed darkness, devours it.
WRIGHT, ‘VESUVIUS IN ERUPTION’
The two prominent lightning strikes in the image reflect his ambivalent accomodation of tradition: The
lower, in the dark shade of the great rocks endlessly
falling to the left of the canvas, changes its trajectory with the abrupt and random crawl of a crack in
glass. But Martin counterbalances this glimpse of a
non-spectacular Real by including the inevitable sublime kitsch as a backdrop, heralded by the upper lightning strike, its childlike zigzag as unreal and stylised as
Harry Potter’s scar. [CM/RN/RM]
ORPEN, ‘ZONNEBEKE’
Membership of Birmingham’s pioneering Lunar
Society brought Wright into contact with many
scientific luminaries, including geologist John
Whitehurst, whose ‘Inquiry into the Original State
and Formation of the Earth’ (1778), fuelled the intense debates of the period.
In Beyond the Pleasure Principle Freud observed that
in dreams—previously understood to be wish-fulfillments—as in their bodily tremors, shellshocked
WWI soldiers returned repeatedly to the traumatic
moments of their injury. He concluded that stronger
than the drive toward pleasure is the drive to repeat,
so as to psychologically ‘bind’ the still-raw trauma.
MARTIN, ‘THE GREAT DAY OF HIS WRATH’
The war artist plays this role on a cultural level:
re-presentation repeats and relays the sublime effects of war-trauma in order to exercise mastery
over it. With this blasted, quake-ridden landscape
Orpen rediscovers the sublime for modernity, in the
convulsive violence of mechanized war.
In this new guise, the sublime experience is revealed
to be that of an unbound trauma that compels the
subject to mechanically and blindly mimic and repeat
the effects of its overwhelming force. [RM /RN]
Splicing together a catastrophe of biblical proportions from multiple closely observed geological
events, Martin’s painting straddles the rhetorical
sublimity of myth and the sublime vision proper to
his contemporary science—that of the impersonal,
contingent forces of formation and destruction.
15
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
In 1774, Wright wrote to his brother: ‘Tell Whitehurst
I wished for his company when on Mount Vesuvius;
his thoughts would have center’d in the bowels of
the mountain, mine skimmed on the surface only…’
Perhaps in order to take the realism of his painting
beyond such surface representation, Wright used
actual ground sulphur for the final application of the
lavaflow at the apex. [RM]
MORE, ‘THE DELUGE’
Remarkable here is the lack of grandiloquence: the
viewer has to do a considerable amount of work to
reconstruct the sublime event on the basis of this
gloomy corner of a post-apocalyptic world, with its
rather stoically resigned, faceless humans, apparently sailing in a coffin.
MILLAIS, ‘DEW-DRENCHED FURZE’
Tennyson’s requiem for a friend who died young
finds the poet grappling with the implication that nature is a mere physical system, amoral, meaningless,
and separated from God’s will. Beyond the evocation of the effects of early morning light, then, Millais
means to explore the tension between the beauty of
the scene and the reality of the life it depicts.
Although the emptiness and subjectlessness of
the painting allies it with Tennyson’s doubt, in the
movement from the icy foreground to the incipient
warmth of the sunrise in the distance, Millais joins
with the poet’s ultimate return to faith. Devoid of
any grand or awesome aspect, the painting heralds
a transition from narrative presentations of the natural sublime into the impressionist technical examination of perceptual effects.
16
URBANOMIC.COM
URBANOMIC / DOCUMENTS
Apocalyptic events are common in the JudaeoChristian tradition; but More’s painting reminds us of
the geological and environmental aspects of apocalyptic texts. The apocalyptic event is not simply a supernatural intervention of the divine; it is manifested
in the material, physical, geological substrate of the
planet. It is rarely the appearance of the divine in
itself. Even in the moment of apocalyptic revelation,
the divine remains hidden, shrouded. [ET/TM /RM]
Are God and Nature then at strife,
That Nature lends such evil dreams?
So careful of the type she seems,
So careless of the single life;
That I, considering everywhere
Her secret meaning in her deeds,
And finding that of fifty seeds
She often brings but one to bear,
I falter where I firmly trod,
And falling with my weight of cares
Upon the great world’s altar-stairs
That slope thro’ darkness up to God,
I stretch lame hands of faith, and grope,
And gather dust and chaff, and call
To what I feel is Lord of all,
And faintly trust the larger hope.
[RM]