The explosion of art and science in Vienna
Review of The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, from Vienna 1900 to the Present by Eric Kandel
This book brings together – and updates – two of my oldest fascinations: the birth of depth psychology and the explosion of expressionist art in fin de siècle Vienna. In this brilliant synthesis, Kandel includes an introduction to the recent advances of cognitive neuroscience as related to both the perception of modern art and what it says about our brains. I discovered all of these things in college in the mid-1970s and was astonished at how the fields had changed and in a sense, came closer. For the reader interested in these issues, I cannot imagine a better book.
Given the number of disciplines, the book goes in many directions. First, there is the historical context of 1900 Vienna: a cosmopolitan capital that was more or less welcoming to all the nationalities and religious groups. Though a major city, the intelligentsia was surprisingly close knit, even across fields. There were major salons where Freud could have met novelists and artists such as Klimt and Robert Musil. According to Kandel, their works and interests were convergent.
Second, there was psychoanalysis, which focused on the unconscious as a major factor in mental health; it was also an aspect of the brain. Freud was, Kandel says, applying the scientific methodology under development at University of Vienna: observe, hypothesize, verify, but this time to heal psychic wounds. He was part of the movement to bring medicine into the hard sciences, though Kandel notes that many of Freud's ideas were intuitive speculation and limited by the times and his own inexperience, in particular his misunderstanding of women’s sexuality.
Third, Viennese artists were exploring the notion of the unconscious in their own way. On the one hand, pushing into new directions because photography had rendered realistic painting redundant, Klimt and then his acolytes Schiele and Kokoschka were experimenting with the portrayal and evocation of strong emotions, essentially inventing the mature form of Expressionism. Following the lead of Van Gogh and Munch, this involved the merging of Mannerism and caricature, with grotesque poses, strong colors, and flat backgrounds of color or design. (Kandel focuses a great deal on Kokoschka, who of the three never appealed to me personally, making a convincing case for his pioneering genius in terms of empathetic art in which the viewer is included as a participant.) On the other hand, local writers were experimenting with narrative, bringing the viewer in to participate in their fiction, much as the painters were doing.
Fourth, Kandel covers related developments in cognitive neuroscience. The perspective is both historical and scientific. While this was the most difficult section for me, it was in many senses the most rewarding. Developing directly from Freud and his search for unconscious brain function, Kandel takes the reader through gestalt psychology, that is, the ability of the brain to quickly construct an understanding or image of the whole from a limited number of characteristics, as recognized in discreet aspects such as a straight line, color contrast, and ovals of the face. Once imaging techniques were perfected (PET and CAT scans from the late 1970s), detailed neurological maps could be constructed of how brains function in real time. This was a revolution in science that occurred after the elementary studies in psychology that I did in college. For example, consciousness is at least partially explained by a large number of areas in the brain acting in concert. Kandel also shows how the old Freudian model – of ego, superego, id, etc. – are actually located in a functional, dynamic map of the brain; I had no idea such a thing was possible. As Kandel demonstrates, Freud and the artists earlier in the century were tapping directly into these discoveries, if in inchoate form.
The book is not an easy read, but it helps if the reader is acquainted with the artists of the time, modern depth psychology, and the examination of the brain as a biological organ. It is at the high undergraduate level. The best thing about the book is that Kandel succeeds in tying it all together and calling for more research in neuro-aesthetics. I cannot do justice to the subtlety and erudition of his arguments, but was spell bound throughout the entire book. Furthermore, I can't say that I have a full grasp of cognitive neuroscience, but it enhanced my appreciation for the art of the time and partially explains why all it began in Vienna in 1900. Finally, Kandel recognizes the contribution of Freud and clearly explains the deficiencies of psychoanalysis without going overboard as many critics do. However, I still cannot grasp why Vienna was the place at that time for these discoveries.
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