39 Goya Saturn Demuring his Children. One of the series of 'Blade Paintings' t&IO-l Museo dd Prado, Madrid, (see Introduction, p. 12) The Dehumanization of Art 1925 Tie study of art from the sociological point of view might at first seem a barren theme, rather like studying a man from his shadow. At first sight, the social effects of an arc so extrinsic, so remote from aesthetic essentials, that it is not easy to see how from this viewpoint one can successfully explore the inner nature of style. But the fruitful aspects of a sociology of art were unexpectedly revealed to me when, a few years ago, 1 happened to be writing about the musical era which started with Debussy. My purpose was to define as clearly as possible the difference between modern and traditional music. The problem was strictly aesthetic, yet I found the shortest road towards its solution started from a simple sociological phenomenon: the unpopularity of modem music, I should now like to consider aJJ the arts which are still thriving in Europe: modern music, painting, poetry, and theatre. The unity that every era maintains within its different manifestations is indeed surprising and mysterious. An identical inspiration is recognizable in the most diverse arts. Without being aware of it, the young musician is attempting to realize in sound exactly the same aesthetic values as his contemporaries, the painter, the poet and the dramatist. And this identity of artistic aspiration must, necessarily, have an identical sociological effect. The unpopularity of today's music is equalled by the unpopularity of the oilier arts. All new art is unpopular, necessarily so, and not by chance or accident. It will be said that every new style must go through a period of quarantine, and one may recall the conflicts that accompanied the advent of Romanticism. The unpopularity of modern art, however, is of a very distinct kind: we would do well to distinguish between what is not popular and what is unpopular. An innovatory style takes a certain time in winning popularity; it is not popular, but neither is it unpopular. The example of the public's acceptance of Romanticism was the exact opposite of that presented by modern art. It made a very rapid conquest of the 'people', whose affection had never been deeply held by the old classical an. The enemy with which Romanticism had to contend was precisely that select minority who had remained loyal to the archaic structure of the poetic ancien regime. Romantic works were the first - since the invention of printing - to enjoy large editions. Above all other movements Romanticism was the most 65 f popular. The first-born of democracy, it was treated by the masses with the greatest affection. Modern art, on the other hand, has the masses against it, and this will always >y- «r» it k unpopular in essence; even more, it is anti- i yvip|ilflr Any new work whatsoever automatically produces a curious sociological effect on the public, splitting it into two parts. One, the lesser group, is formed by a small number of persons who arc favorable to it; the other, the great majority, is hostile. (Let us leave aside those equivocal creatures, the snobs.) Thus the work of art acts as a social force creating two antagonistic groups, separating the masses into two different castes of men. What is the principle that differentiates these two classes ? Every work of art awakens different responses: some people like it, others do not; some like it less, others more. No principle is involved: the accident of our individual disposition will decide where we stand. But in the case of modern art the separation occurs on a deeper plane than the mere differences in individual taste. It is not a matter of the majority of the » public not liking the new work and the minority liking it. What happens is that the majority, the mass of the people, does not understand it. In my opinion, the characteristic of contemporary art 'from the sociological point of view' is that ii divides the public into these two classes of men: those who understand it and those who do not. This implies that the one group possesses an organ of comprehension denied to the other; that they are two distinct varieties of the human species. Modern art. evidently, is not for everybody, as was Romantic art, but from the outset is aimed at a special, gifted minority. Hence the irritation it arouses in > the majority. When someone does not like a work of art, but has undcr-stood it, he feels superior to it and has no room for irritation. But when distaste arises from the fact of its not having been understood, then the spectator feels humiliated, with an obscure awareness of his inferiority for which he must rnmpfmatf. hy an inHignnnt assertion of himself. _Modem art, hv its mere presence, obliges the pood bourgeois to feel wliat he is: a good bourgeois, unfit for artistic sacraments, blind and deaf to all nrtthrtii* Ixauty. Obviously this cannot happen with impunity after a hundred years of all-embracing flattery of the masses and the apotheosis of the people'. Accustomed to rinminafc in pvpryihinfr. the masses feel that thwr 'pfthM:' nn» ttirftfli$rn*t by modem art, which is an art of privilege, of an aristocracy of instinct. Wherever the young muses make their appearance, the crowd boos. For a century and a half 'the people' have pretended to be the whole of society. The music of Stravinsky or the drama of Pirandello obliges them to recognize themselves for what they arc - one ingredient among many in the social structure, inert material of the historical process. On the other hand, modern art also helps the elite to know and recognize each other amid the greyness ot the crowd, and to learn their role which consists of being the few who have to struggle aeninst the many. The time is approaching when society, from polities to art, will once more organize itself into two orders: that of the distinguished and that of tlv vulonr Thf undifferentiated unity - chaotic, amorphous, without an anatomical structure or governing discipline cannot continue. Beneath all contemporary life lies a profound and disturbing misconception: the assumpGon mat reaTeQualitv exists among men, wmie every step we take plainly shows us the contrary. If the new art is not intelligible to everybody, this implies that its resources are not those genetically human. It is not an art for men in general, but for a very particular class of men, who may not be of more worth than the others, but who are apparently distinct. There is one thing above all that it would be well to define. What do the majority of people call aesthetic pleasure? What goes on in their mind when a work of art 'pleases' them ? There is no doubt about the answer: people like a work of art that succeeds in involving them in the human destinies jl propounds. The loves, hates, griefs and joys of the characters touch their heart: they participate In them, as if they were occurring in real life. And they say a work is 'good* when it manages to produce the quantity of illusion necessary for the imaginary characters to rate as living persons. In poetry, they will look for the loves and griefs of the man behind the poet. In painting, they will be attracted only by those pictures where they find men and women who would be interesting to know. A landscape will appear 'pretty' to them when the scene represented merits a visit on account of its pleasant or emotive characteristics. This means that for the majority of people aesthetic enjoyment is not an attitude of mind essentially different from the one they habitually adopt in other areas of life; but it is perhaps less utilitarian, more compact, and without unpleasant consequences. In essence, the object which concerns them in an, which serves as the focus of their attention and the rest ofihcir faculties, is the same as in eveiyday life; human beings and their passions. And they will call art that which provides them with the means of making contact with human things. Thus they will tolerate certain forms of unreality and fantasy only to the extent that they do not interfere with their perception of human forms and situations. As soon as the purely aesthetic elements become dominant nnH ttHarhwt fmpi _the human story, the public loses its way &nA