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Herbert Read

 

(1895-1968)

After a brief spell as a bank clerk the British writer, critic, and poet Herbert Read studied at Leeds University before serving in the army in the First World War. He became an important figure in the promotion of Modernism in Britain, developing friendships with key figures such as the poet T. S. Eliot, the sculptors Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth, and the painter Ben Nicholson. After working in the Treasury from 1819 to 1922 he developed his interests in the visual arts through employment as an Assistant Keeper at the Victoria and Albert Museum from 1922 to 1931. This impetus was furthered through his appointment to the Watson Gordon Professorship of Fine Art at the University of Edinburgh from 1931 to 1933, followed by a period of six years as editor of and contributor to the Burlington Magazine. Amongst the most important texts promoting Modernism published in Britain was Read's Art & Industry: The Principles of Industrial Design (1934), the layout of which was designed by former Bauhaus tutor Herbert Bayer. In this seminal text, the designer was portrayed as an abstract artist working in industry, reconciling facets of design such as materials, form, colour, and proportion with modern mass-production technology. Read felt that the designer should play a central role in modern manufacture, rather than the low-paid, subservient role that generally prevailed. Read was also involved with the avant-garde group of artists and architects who formed Unit One in London in 1933 and Circle (1937), an interdisciplinary survey of international Constructivist art. In addition to Read, contributors to the latter included Breuer, Le Corbusier, Gropius, Moholy-Nagy, and Mondrian and subjects covered ranged from art and architecture, biotechnics, and choreography to engineering and typography. He was also a leading figure in the mounting of the controversial Surrealist Exhibition at the New Burlington Galleries, London, in 1936. During the Second World War Read was a director of the Design Research Unit, established in 1943, which was to emerge as a significant consultancy in the post-war period. With Roland Penrose, in 1948 he founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London which, amongst other things, provided a focal point for the Independent Group in the early 1950s. He was knighted in 1953. Amongst his other writings relating to the visual arts were Art Now (1933), Art & Society (1937), Education through Art (1943), Modern Painting (1959), and Modern Sculpture (1964).

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Architecture and Landscaping: Sir Herbert Edward Read
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(1893–1968)

British critic and writer. He was a leading supporter of Modernism in the 1930s, and edited Unit One: The Modern Movement in English Architecture, Painting and Sculpture (1934). His The Meaning of Art (1931), Art Now (1933), Art and Industry (1934), Surrealism (1936), Art and Society (1936), and Education Through Art (1943) were reprinted several times, and were very influential in spreading the gospel of Modernism in the English-speaking world. His Concise History of Modern Painting (1959) and Concise History of Modern Sculpture (1964) further enhanced his reputation. He edited the Burlington Magazine (1933–9)

Bibliography

  • Chilvers, Osborne, & Farr (eds.) (1988)
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004)
  • Jane Turner (1996)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Sir Herbert Read
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Read, Sir Herbert, 1893-1968, English poet and critic. His studies at the Univ. of Leeds were interrupted by World War I, in which he served with a Yorkshire regiment. After the war he completed his education. His first volume of poems, Naked Warriors (1919), treats the horrors of war. An advocate of free verse, he published poetry all his life; his last volume of Collected Poems was published in 1966. Read was an important critic of both art and literature, and he influenced the treatment of these subjects in British education. As an art critic he defined and advocated various modern art movements and aided the careers of many British artists, notably Henry Moore. His works of art criticism include The Innocent Eye (1933), Art and Industry (1934), Art and Society (1936), Education Through Art (1943), Art Now (1948), The Grass Roots of Art (1961), and Art and Alienation: The Role of the Artist in Society (1967). As a literary critic, Read reasserted the importance of the 19th-century English Romantic authors, most notably in The True Voice of Feeling: Studies in English Romantic Poetry (1953). His other works of literary criticism include Form in Modern Poetry (1932), Coleridge as Critic (1949), and Phases of English Poetry (1950). Read also wrote many essays, some of which are collected in The Cult of Sincerity (1969).

Bibliography

See his autobiographical The Contrary Experience (1974); studies by W. T. Harder (1972) and G. Woodcock (1972).

Wikipedia: Herbert Read
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Sir Herbert Read

Read pictured at home in 1958 (photo by Roloff Beny)
Born 4 December 1893(1893-12-04)
Kirkbymoorside, North Yorkshire
Died 12 June 1968 (aged 74)
Stonegrave, North Yorkshire
Occupation Poet, modern art historian, and literary & art critic
Nationality English
Writing period 1915–1968

Sir Herbert Edward Read, DSO, MC (1893–1968) was an English anarchist poet, and critic of literature and art. He was one of the earliest English writers to take notice of existentialism, and was strongly influenced by proto-existentialist thinker Max Stirner.

Contents

Early life

He was born in Kirkbymoorside in North Yorkshire. His studies at the University of Leeds were interrupted by the outbreak of the First World War, during which he served with the Green Howards in France, He received the Military Cross and the Distinguished Service Order, and reached the rank of Captain. During the war Read founded the journal Arts and Letters with Frank Rutter, one of the first literary periodicals to publish work by T. S. Eliot.[1]

Early work

Read's first volume of poetry was Songs of Chaos, self-published in 1915. His second collection, published in 1919, was called Naked Warriors, and drew on his experiences fighting in the trenches of the First World War. His work, which shows the influence of Imagism, was mainly in free verse. His Collected Poems appeared in 1946. As a critic of literature, Read mainly concerned himself with the English Romantic poets (e.g., The True Voice of Feeling: Studies in English Romantic Poetry, 1953). He published a novel, The Green Child. He contributed to the Criterion (1922–1939) and he was for many years a regular art critic for the Listener.

Read was also interested in the art of writing. He cared deeply about style and structure and summarized his views in English Prose Style (1928), a primer on, and a philosophy of, good writing. The book is considered one of the best on the foundations of the English language and how those foundations can be and have been used to write English with elegance and distinction.

Art criticism

However, Read was (and remains) better known as an art critic. He was a champion of modern British artists such as Paul Nash, Ben Nicholson, Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth. He became associated with Nash's contemporary arts group Unit One. Read was professor of fine arts at the University of Edinburgh (1931–33) and editor of the trend-setting Burlington Magazine (1933–38). He was one of the organisers of the London International Surrealist Exhibition in 1936 and editor of the book Surrealism, published in 1936, with contributions from André Breton, Hugh Sykes Davies, Paul Éluard, and Georges Hugnet. He also served as a trustee of the Tate Gallery and as a curator at the Victoria & Albert Museum (1922–1939), as well as co-founding the Institute of Contemporary Arts with Roland Penrose in 1947.

From 1953–54 Read served as the Norton Professor at Harvard University. He also wrote "The Happy Warrior", a poem.

Anarchism and philosophical outlook

Politically Read regarded himself as an anarchist, albeit in the English quietist tradition of Edward Carpenter and William Morris. Nevertheless, he was knighted on the recommendation of Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1953 for "services to literature".

Dividing Read's writings on politics from those on art and culture is difficult as he saw art, culture and politics as a single congruent expression on human consciousness. His total work amounts to over 1,000 published titles.

To Hell With Culture was republished by Routledge in 2002 and deals specifically with Read's disdain for the term culture and expands on his anarchist view of the artist as artisan, as well as presenting a major analysis of the work of Eric Gill.

In his philosophical outlook, Read was close to the European Idealist traditions represented by Friedrich von Schelling, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, believing that reality as it is experienced by the human mind was as much a product of the human mind as any external or objective actuality. In other words, the mind is not a camera recording the reality it perceives through the eyes; it is also a projector throwing out its own reality. This meant that art was not, as many Marxists believed, simply a product of a bourgeois society, but a psychological process that had evolved simultaneously to the evolution of consciousness. Art was, therefore, a biological phenomenon, a view that frequently pitted Read against Marxist critics such as Anthony Blunt in the 1930s. Read, in this respect, was influenced by developments in German art psychology. His Idealist background also led Read towards an interest in psychoanalysis. Read became a pioneer in the English-speaking world in the use of psychoanalysis as a tool for art and literary criticism.

Read was probably the first English writer to take an interest in the writings of the French Existentialists, as early as 1949, particularly those of Jean-Paul Sartre. Although Read never described himself as an existentialist, he did acknowledge that his theories often found support among those who did. Read perhaps was the closest England came to an existentialist theorist of the European tradition.[2]

Death and legacy

Following his death in 1968, Read was neglected, arguably due to the increasing predominance of social theories of art, including Marxism, in academia. His work continued to be read by some followers and academics. In the 1990s there was a revival of interest in him following a major exhibition in 1993 at Leeds City Art Gallery. Since then more of his work has been republished and there was a Herbert Read Conference, at Tate Britain in June 2004.

Read was a friend and colleague of Frank McEwen, and it was due in part to his suggestion that the younger man applied for the directorship of the National Gallery of Zimbabwe.

On 11 November 1985, Read was among 16 Great War poets commemorated on a slate stone unveiled in Westminster Abbey's Poet's Corner.[3] The inscription on the stone was written by a fellow Great War poet, Wilfred Owen. It reads: "My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity."[4]

Quotes and excerpts

  • "Art is an attempt to create pleasing forms."
  • 'Theirs is the hollow victory. They are deceived.

But you my brother and my ghost, if you can go

Knowing that there is no reward, no certain use

In all your sacrifice, then honour is reprieved.

To fight without hope is to fight with grace,

The self reconstructed, the false heart repaired.' -To a Conscript of 1940[5]

From To Hell with Culture:

  • "It is of the essence of genius to be uncommitted to any abstraction."
  • "A democracy does not despise or suppress that faculty which the totalitarian socialist makes so elusive – his thinking or rational faculty. The libertarian socialist must also plan, but his plans, apart from being tentative and experimental, will make the widest use of all human faculties.
  • "The libertarian planner must also remember that cities are built for citizens, and the houses and buildings will be inhabited, not by ciphers, but by human beings with sensations and feelings, and that these human beings will be unhappy unless they can freely express themselves in their environment.
  • "For it is upon personal happiness that society ultimately and collectively depends."

From Poetry and Anarchism:

  • "In order to create it is necessary to destroy; and the agent of destruction in society is the poet. I believe that the poet is necessarily an anarchist, and that he must oppose all organized conceptions of the State, not only those which we inherit from the past, but equally those which are imposed on people in the name of the future."

Bibliography

Select List of Works by Herbert Read

  • Arp (The World of Art Library) (1968)
  • Art and Alienation (1967)
  • My Anarchism (1966)
  • Unit One (1966), editor
  • To Hell With Culture (1963)
  • Eric Gill (1963)
  • Introduction to Hubris: A Study of Pride by Pierre Stephen Robert Payne (1960)
  • The Tenth Muse (1957)
  • Icon and Idea (1955)
  • Education Through Art (1954)
  • Revolution & Reason (1953)
  • The Art of Sculpture (1951)
  • Education for Peace (1950)
  • Existentialism, Marxism and Anarchism (1949)
  • Art and Society (1945)
  • Education Through Art (1943)
  • The Paradox of Anarchism (1941)
  • Philosophy of Anarchism (1940)
  • Anarchy & Order; Poetry & Anarchism (1938)
  • Collected Essays in Literary Criticism (1938)
  • The Grass Roots of Art (1937)
  • The Green Child (1935)
  • Art and Industry (1934)
  • Art Now (1933)
  • Wordsworth (1932)
  • English Prose Style (1931)
  • Naked Warriors (1919)

Writings on Herbert Read

  • Goodway, David, (ed.), Herbert Read Reassessed (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1998)
  • King, James, Herbert Read - The Last Modern (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1990)
  • Paraskos, Michael, (ed.), Re-Reading Read: Critical Views on Herbert Read (London: Freedom Press, 2007)
  • Read, Benedict and David Thistlewood (eds.), Herbert Read: A British Vision of World Art (London: Lund Humphries, 1993)
  • Thistlewood, David, Formelessness and Form (London: Routledge, 1984)
  • Woodcock, George, Herbert Read: the Stream and the Source (London: Faber and Faber, 1972)

References

  1. ^ James King, Herbert Read - The Last Modern (London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1990.
  2. ^ See Michael Paraskos, The Elephant and the Beetles: the Aesthetic Theories of Herbert Read, PhD, University of Nottingham, 2005
  3. ^ "Poets of the Great War" at Brigham Young University
  4. ^ http://net.lib.byu.edu/english/wwi/poets/Preface.html Brigham Young University
  5. ^ "To a Conscript of 1940" by Herbert Read

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Modern Design Dictionary. A Dictionary of Modern Design. Copyright © 2004, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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