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Save Didi-Huberman Warburg & Panofsky artistic survival For Later ARTISTIC SURVIVAL
Panofsky vs. Warburg and the Exorcism of Impure Time
Georges Didi-Huberman
Translated by Vivian Rehberg and Boris Belay
“Survival” is the central concept, the Hauptproblent, of Aby Warburg and the
Warburgian school of art history. In Warburg’s work, the term Nachleben refers
to the survival (the continuity or afterlife and metamorphosis) of images and
motifs—as opposed to their renascence after extinction or, conversely, their
replacement by innovations in image and motif. Almost every section of War-
burg’s Kulturwissenschafiliche Bibliothek opens with a collection of documents
related to artistic survivals, the concept was so fundamental to the structure
of his thinking. Formed within the context of Renaissance studies—a field
o-
ciated by definition with revival and innovation —Warburg’s concept of sur-
vival assumed a temporal model for art history radically different from any
employed at the time. He thereby introduced the problem of memory into the
Jongue durée of the history of motifs and images: a problem that (as Warburg him-
self observed) transcends turning points in historiography and boundaries between
cultures.
Warburg's idea of afterlife or survival differed widely even from that of
Anton Springer. Warburg's model presupposed a way—a decidedly anthropo-
logical way —of envisaging the historicity of culture. At this level, Warburg was
Common Knowledge 9:2
Copyright 2003 by Duke University Press
273274
COMMON KNOWLEDGE
V
rretiens sur Lart et la sience (Paris: Biro, 1991), 29."The 3. Von Schloss
lish translation app
extending Jacob Burckhardt’s analyses and renewing the value of Burckhardt-
ian dialectical notions like “history and type?’ “form and force? “latencies and
crises” On the other hand, Warburg’s model suggested a new way—a decidedly
archaeological way—of representing the anthropological field of images. And at
this level, Warburg was extending Edward B. ‘Tylor’s analyses, finding value in
donors’ testaments, genealogical trees, astrological themes, the borrowings of
High Art from artisanal techniques—features of culture entirely neglected by
any history of art founded on aesthetics. Warburg's revolution was aimed at art
ari and Wincklemann. Time conceived as
history of the kinds represented by Va
a succession of direct relationships (“influences”) or conceived in the positivist
way as a succession of facts had no appeal for Warburg. Instead he pursued, as a
counterpoint or counterrhythm to influence and fact and chronology, a ghostly
and symptomatic time. Ghirlandaio’s portraits belong, of course, to the chrono-
logical time of quattrocento art—they fall within the rubric of modern art in the
Vasarian sense—but for Warburg, those paintings are incomprehensible until
the anachronistic time of the survivals they embody or incorporate is elucidated.
Warburg found Etruscan and even (via the votive effigies of the Santissima
Annunziata) medieval survivals in the Sassetti Chapel frescoes: their “revivalist”
contemporaneity—their participation in the Renaissance—was haunted and
belied by these spectral memories. Such was, briefly summarized, the first lesson
of Warburg's Nachleben.
Was the lesson understood? Conclusively understood, | would say, by
some; but by the mainstream, definitively not. And in the most crucial insta
nees,
procedures more intricate, problematic, and covertly hostile than understanding
or misunderstanding have pertained.
History of the Wax Portrait, published in 1911 by Julius von Schlosser, bor-
rowed its vocabulary from Schlosser’s friend Aby Warburg (though also directly
from Edward Tylor)! and demonstrated that “afterlife” offered the only route
to understanding the most peculiar aspect of wax sculpture: its long duration,
its resistance to the history of style:
its capacity to survive without exhibiting
significant evolution2 The history of images, in Schlosser’s sense, is in no wa
a “natural his
ory” but instead an elaboration and a methodological construction;
that his history escapes the laws of conventional evolutionism tends to justify hi
trenchant critique, at the close of the book, of Vasarian teleological pretensions.
Unless otherwise noted, all translations are done by sations on Art and Science (London: Thames and Hudson,
jane Rehberg.
della mia vita?
rie dell'arre nelle experienze et nei ricordi di uno suo cultor
(19245 Kalian trans,
E.H.Gombrich and Didier Eribon, Ce que image nous dt
Julius von Schlosser, “Commentario 1993)
trans. Giovanna Federici Ajroldi, in La sto-
2. See Georges Didi-Huberman, “Viscosités et sur-
vivances: Lhistoire de Part a
tigue 54.64 (1998): 138-62
Sprouve du matériau,”
ri G
1930), 36. See also,
iso de portrait en cre, rans. Edouard
13a A Lifelong Interest: Conver Pornmier (1911; French trans, Paris: Macula, 1997), 7-9.
7Presumably Schlosser, through modesty rather than ignorance, left undeveloped
a few theoretical problems inherent to survival as a model. Nevertheless, an idea
of considerable significance began to take shape in his book: Whereas art bas a bis-
tory, images have survivals—survivals that discredit them, banish them from the
sphere of accredited high art. In return, the history of artistic styles (the history
credited by high culture) holds their survival in contempt. It is no surprise, then,
that Schlosser’s History of the Wax Portrait has long been read by anthropologists
rather than art historians.
Edgar Wind probably never risked a theoretical choice as exploratory and
radical as those of Warburg and Schlosser. Still, Wind clearly understood that
Nachleben had to be used as more than a mundanely biological metaphor. “When
we refer to the survival of Antiquity.” he wrote in 1934, “we mean that the sym-
bols created by the Ancients have continued to exert their power on successi
generations; but what do we mean by ‘continue’?"6 Wind went on to show that
survival entails a complex set of operations in which forgetting, the transforma-
tion of sense, involuntary memory, and unexpected rediscovery work in unison —
complexities meant to remind us that the temporality at play is cultural rather
than natural. Heré, Wind's critique was not only of Heinrich Wolffin’s “imma
nent history,” but of historical continuity in general. The presumption of conti-
nuity ignores, Wind held, what every survival entails: a play of “pauses” and
“crises,” of “leaps” and “periodic reversions? that together form, not a narrative
account of the history in question, but a web of memory—not a succession of
artistic facts, but a theory of symbolic complexity.”
‘The critique of historicism implied by Warburg’s hypothesis could not be
stated more clearly than in Wind’s rendering. Gertrud Bing has taken note of
Warburg’s paradoxical position in the epistemology of the historical sciences (it
might be added that Michel Foucaulv’s positioning is paradoxical in a similar
way). On the one hand, Warburg could be occasionally incomplete in his analy-
ses, biased, or even wrong about various historical facts and phenomena. On the
other hand, his hypothesis about memory—the specific kind of memory sup-
posed by Nachleben —must profoundly alter, if taken seriously, our understand-
ing of what a historical phenomenon or fact is. Bing insisted on the way in which
4. Seevon S
a discussion about whether the survival ofa formal motif’ the Class
has a single or multiple origin
vols. (London: €
7. Wind, intro., 1
i. On the relationship between
275
Didi-Huberman - Peace and Mind: Part 5
hlosser, Histoire da portrait en ire, 31~32, for 6. Edgar Wind, inteo, to 4 Biblingrapby on the Survival of
sell, 1934-39), tv,
5. Von Schlosser, Histoire du portrait en cire, 8. Schlosser approach of Wind's and Warburg's approach to artistic
had long been interested in the forms of the “survival of survivals, see Bernhard Busch
paganism” in Christian art. As he wrote in 1894:"The past tichtiges ge
i * Len 4 (1985): 165-209
in newer forms of culture must be quite deep” (von
Schlosser, “He
des Altertums?
J. Bard, 19271, 9-43).
enseitiges Faird
erywhere so lively and strong that the traces it has left Warbur
inische Elemente in der christlichen Kunst
in Pratatien, Vortrige und Aujiitce (Be
ndorf, “War ein sehr
mn: Edgar Wind und Aby276
COMMON KNOWLEDGE
8. Gertrud Bing, “A.M. Warburg? Journal ofthe Warburg he meant superstitions, children
cand Courtauld Institutes 28 (1965): 301-30:
9.
don: Verso, 1908), 27-56.
xo. Gombrich, Aly Werkirg, An Intellectual Biography
(London: Warburg Institute, 1970; 2ded.,
versity of Chicago Press, 1990), 307
1. Gombrich, Ay Warburg, 16:
Kaultnrsisenschafe that Warlvuny had singled out as his prin-
ipa concern was that of ‘das Nacbleber der Antike
“the afterlife of classical antiquity.’ But this use of afterlife’ 12. Gombrich, “The Style alan
isnot current in
ters yand 4 of his book to ‘Survivals in Culture’—by which 1966), 12
See Walter Benjami
Drama, rans. John Osborne (1963; English trans., Lon-
was preempred by Burnert Tylor, who devoted ebap- Ren
the concept of Nachleben should transform our idea of tradition. No longer imag-
inable as an unbroken river, where accruals are carried from up- to downstream,
tradition should, after Warburg, be conceived as a tense dialectic, a drama that
unfolds between the river’ flow and its whirling eddies. Walter Benjamin thought
of historicity in something like this way.? But it must be emphasized that few his-
torians have taken Warburg's lesson on board. Historians in general prefer not
to risk being wrong, so they embrace the idea of facts and condescend to specu-
lation. We might call their attitude scientific modesty or cowardice or philo-
sophical laziness; it may result from a positivist abhorrence of theory.
E.H. Gombrich, hi
tor of the Warburg Institute in London), intended his 1970 biography to put Aby
rian of culture par excellence (and at the time direc-
Warburg's achievement in perspective; but if the book does so, it is from the
standpoint of an Oedipus regarding his Laius. Evident throughout is Gombrich’s
desire that the ghos
—the revenant, as Warburg was defining himself by 1924—
not return." Gombrich’s intent was to ensure that the outmoded hypothesis of
survival not survive (or eternally return) in the back of art historians’ minds. To
achieve this end, two sorts of operation were required. First, Gombrich had to
invalidate the dialectical s
ructure of survival; that is, he had to deny that a dou-
ble rhythm, comprising both survivals and renascences, organizes and renders
hybrid or impure the temporality of images and motifs. Gombrich went so far as
to claim that Warburg's survivals amount to nothing but revivals.!! The second
gambit on Gombrich’s agenda—to invalidate the anachronistic structure of
Nachleben—demanded no more than a return to Anton Springer, to Springer’
reperiodization of the distinction between survival and renascence. In other
words, Gombrich sought to reduce a theoretical distinction to one more simply
chronological (between Middle Ages and Renaissance). He then finished the job
by distinguishing the obscure “tenacity”
of medieval survivals from the inventive
“flexibility” of imitations ail'antica, which only a renascence worthy of the
name-
the Renaissance of the fifteenth century—could produce.'?
Wd other residues
games, 3
310. of past phi lization. Warburg certainly
wished Nachlehen to comprise these survivals, but he was
es in any given
‘The Origin of German Tragic
more ca ow be described as
yeerned with wha would,
‘revivals,’ the reappearance in the Italian Renaissance of
artistic forms and psychological states derived from the
mnt world?
¢ also Gombrich, *Aby Warburg and
hicago: Uni- in Stuai in onore di Gitdio Carlo Argan (Blorence:
Nuova Italia, 1994), 48, in which the Warburgian question
Was bedeutet das Nacbleben der Antike? is translated as “How
he special problem of re ve ca interpret the continued revivals of elements of
‘culture in Western civilization?”
literally
itation and Assim=
ies in the Art of the
lish trans., London: Phaidon,
Pnglish, and the nearest equivalent, ‘sur- lation,” in Norve and Form, Stu
cance 1 (19613
8But Gombrich was not the high exorcising priest of our poltergeist; that
honor belongs to Erwin Panofsky. However reluctantly, Gombrich himselfacknow!-
edged that Panofsky invalidated the concept of Nacbleben for generations of art his-
torian
s to come.!s As early as 1921, Panofsky published an article titled “Diirer and
Classical Antiquity” to rival and rectify Warburg’s paper “Diirer and Italian Antiq-
uity” (published fifteen years before).!* Despite tributes paid to Warburg, the prob-
lematic of survivals yields
in Panofsky’s paper to one of influences —and the ques
tion of pathos, tied in Warburg's thinking to the Nietzschean Dionys
1c, yields to
a problematic of types and the beau idéal (supported by references to Kant and to
ns).!5 In Panofky’s
classic rhetori 1929 obituary for Warburg, the latter’s key
expres
sion Nachleben der Antike goes unmentioned and all that is left of survival is
Rezeptionsgescichte and “heritage” (Erbteil des Altertums).\6
In 1933, Panofsky joined Fritz, Sax! in his attempt to historicize Warburg's
conceptual schemas—an entirely legitimate endeavor.!” Panofsky’s first impor-
tant publication in English (his entry visa to a new intellectual and institutional
context that would transform his exile into an empire) was a long article, coau-
thored with Saxl, entitled “Classical Mythology in Medieval Art.”'® It is pos:
ble and relevant, up to a point, to read their article
an extension of Warburg’s
work on the survival of the antique gods. ‘To all appearances, Panofsky and Saxl
limit themselves to applying the notion of Nacbleben to a chronological sphere in
which Warburg had not worked directly. Panofksy and Saxl clear a theoretical
space for survival and show how it invalidates the Vasarian view of history —but
they do so with an immediate caveat, almost a retraction:
‘Thee:
Ghiberti, Alberti, and especially Giorgio Vi
art was overthrow
not revive until, during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Ital
served as the foundation for what is usually called the Renaissance.
In thinking as the
They were wrong insofar as the Rena
liest Ttalian writers about the history of art, such as for instance
i, thought that classical
at the beginning of the Christian era and that it did
did the early writes
s were both right and wrong.
\ce was connected with the
13. Gombrich, Aly Warhurg, 316=17
277
Didi-Huberman « Peace and Mind: Part 5
14. Enwin Panofiky, “Albrecht Diirer and Classical Antiq-
uity? im Meaning in the Visual Arts (1921233 Garden City,
NY: Doubleday, 1955), 277-320.
15, See Panofsky, “Albrecht Diiren?”
7-795 30112 (in
tn the Nietzschean Dionysian is explicitly tempered by
test and balanced by the principle of moderation).
16. Panofsk
(1929): 250.
“Professor A. Warburg,” Das Jobamenn 3.9
>. See Fritz Saxl, “Das Nachleben der Antik
jihrung in die Bibliothek Warburg.” Hamburger
Universtits-Zeitung 2.9 (1920): 43 Sal, nto
delantichita. Studien mw den Arb Warburgs!
Repertorium fiir Kunsteissenscbaft 18 (122): 220~72; and
Saxl, “Brithes Christentum und spaites Heidentum in ihren
kiinstlerischen Ausdrucksformen,” Jabriueh fiir Kunst=
gescbiebte 2 (1923): 63-121. A shift is noticeable between
the articles of 1920
‘mento. Saxl continued the project with his new co
tor, in Panofsky and Saxl, “A Late Antique Rel
bol in Works by Holbein and Titian? Burlington Magazine,
1926,
by Gand after) Sebastiano del Piomboy’ Old Master Draw
ings 2 (1928): 31-34.
id ty22 from Nuchleben vo rinasci-
nas Symn-
77-81. See also Panofsky, “Two ‘Lost’ Drawings
18. Panofsky and S: ly
Art Metropolitan Museum Studies 4.2 (1933)
in Medieval
Bo.278
COMMON KNOWLEDGE
1g. Panofiky and Saxl, “Classical Mythole
20. Panofky and Sasl, “Classical Mytholog
by Warburg: see, for instance, “Italian Artand Interna-
tional Astrology in the Palazzo Schifanoia,
inofsky and Saxl, “Classical Mythology:
263-68. (This assertion goes agai
‘Middle Ages by innumerable links
throughout the Middle Ages—literary, philosoph
Classical conceptions survived
al, scientific, and
artistic —and they were especially strong after the time of Charlemagne,
under whose reign there had been a deliberate classical revival in almost
every cultural field. The early writers were right insofar as the artistic
forms under which the classical conception persisted were utterly dif-
ferent from our present ideas of Antiquity, which did not come into exis-
tence until the “Renaissance” in its true sense of the “rebirth” of antiq-
uity as a well-defined historical phenomenon.”
‘These introductory remarks imply, not just an extension, but a dissociation or
and Saxl’s claim
burg intended, despite Panofs
perhaps inversion, of what Wa
to be his disciples.2° What they extend of Warburg's theory is his overall notion
xl
invert or even abandon is the structural or synchronic content of the theory: all
thati
of classical survival and ¢
that survival and Renaissance are, as ideas, at antipodes. What Panofsky and §
nonchronological or anachronistic in the polarization, the double rhythm,
sical resurrection. Beginning with that resurrection
(the Renaissance), matters divide more neatly as to value and time, axiology and
periodization. Survival becomes a “low” category of historical analysis—and its
usefulness in understanding the Middle Ages renders that epoch a time of artis-
nd an
tic conventionality, a degeneration (however gradual) of classical norm:
unfortunate disjunction of form and content: “The medieval mind is incapable of
realizing the unity of classical form and classical subject matter??|
Panofsky and Saxl restore the Renaissance to its status as an artistic sum-
‘ical authentic
mit, a period of stylistic purity and archaeologi ity. But they go fur-
ther, defining the quattrocento and cinquecento as virtually the only time in
which humanity, freed from the burdens of the conventional and the symbolic,
has been true to itself: “The reintegration of classical mythological subjects
achieved during the Renaissance was an incentive as well as a symptom of the
general evolution which led to the rediscovery of man as a natural being stripped
ty or
tension is displaced from this account (Panofsky and Saxl do invoke the Counter-
of his protective cover of symbolism and conventionality?” Not every an
Reformation: the end of the Renaissance). But only the “classical harmony” of the
Renaissance “in its true sense” is said to transcend the artistic and cultural crises
that survivals from the past revealed negatively or by default’ There remained
only one conceptual difficulty to resolve: the Renaissance—the resurrection of
tions to the Cnleural History of the Renaissance [xg12; Los
1999), 81 “In
of substance, at least, the so-called medieval mind was
accuracy’)
Angeles: Getty Research Inst
240, quite capable of pursuing archaeologi
explicit statements
lic starements 4 Panofsky and Saxl, “Classical Mythology.’ 268.
‘errara? trans. Panofsky and Saxl, “Classical Mythology,’ 276-78.
David Britt, in The Renewal of Pagan Antiquity: Contriba past time—contradicts the assumption of Navhleben on two levels not easily rec-
onciled. The coincidence of the axiological and the chronological is not inevitable.
Panofsky found an effective solution to the problem by distinguishing between
two different orders or categories: the synchronic order that he calls “renovation”
and the “well-defined historical phenomenon” of the Renaissance. What is some-
times termed the Carolingian Renaissance is
for Panofsky, not a Renaissance but
a renovation. The only Renaissance “in its true sense” is that of the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries.” As for survival, the concept was now tucked away in the
haze of its relative imprecision.
From 1944 onward, Panofsky replaced the term “renascence” with “ren-
ovation.”?5 This system would be locked into place with the 1960 publication of
Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art, a book based on papers given in 1952
(but in development during the preceding eight years).26 Panofsky forcefully reit=
erates that the Carolingian “renovation, and in general all of the Middle Ages’
“protohumanist” moments, were in no way Renaissances in the strict sense of the
term but only partial returns to antiquity, only renascences.2” In order to resolve
his initial problematie—the relationship between historical continuity and his-
torical change?*—Panofsky built a framework for understanding that, due to its
three-part structure, resembles the famous semiological distinction that he makes
among “primary subject matter? “secondary or conventional subject matter,” and
“intrinsic meaning or content” in the introduction to Studies in Iconology.2?
AC
structure the “theory of historical time? and at the top of it we find the Renais-
‘ording to Panofsky, a tripartite hierarchy (ancient, medieval, modern) must
sance, whose capital R signals its chronological importance and timeless
dignity —a dignity that Panofsky qualifies with Hegelian expressions like “self-
realization,’ “becoming aware,’ “becoming real?’ and “total phenomenon." For
Panofsky, Vasari (who, after all, said the s
same thing) was right. Art awakened to
its own consciousness, its own history, realization, and ideal signification, in and
through the Renaissance
24. Panolsky and Saxl, “Classical Mythology,
279
=
=
z
25. Panofiky,
Review 6 (1944): 201-36.
“Renaissance and Renascences!” Kenyon
26, Panofsky, Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art
(Stockholm: Almgvist and Wisksells), 1960,
27. Panofsky, Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art,
42-113.
28. Panofsky, Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art, 1
“On the one hand, there are those who hold that ‘human
nature tends to remain much the same in all times’ [Lynn
Thorndike}, so thata search for essential and definable dif-
ferences between succeeding generations oF groups of
generations would be futile on principle. On the other,
35. there are those who hold that human nature changes so
tunremittingly and, at the same time, so individually, that
nno attempt can and should be made to reduce such differ
ences to a common denominator”
29. Panofsky, “Iconography and Ieonology: An Introduc-
tion to the Study of Renaissance Art,” in Meaning in the
Visual Arts (2939; reprint, Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1982), 26-54. I have tried to:analyze this distinction
in Devant Pnage: Question Pasée aux Fins d'une Histoire de
Are (Paris: Mi
1990), 105-68.
30. Panofsky, Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art,
8-0, 31280
COMMON KNOWLEDGE
In anticipation of the event, over the longue durée of the Middle Ages, par-
tial renovations took place, renascences that, as moments of reawakening to clas-
sm, shook up the history of forms.*! Eventually the dormant substance from
which these moments stand out in relief appears. Panofsky hesitates to name the
substance or to legitimize it theoretically, preferring instead to speak, in a round-
about way, of an incubation period—but clearly what he is referring to is das
Nachleben der Antike in Warburg’s sense.*? Significantly, the last sentences of
Panofsky’s Renaissance and Renascences bring the errant ghost of survival into direct
opposition with the ideal, intangible, pure, immortal, omnipresent, resurrected
soul of classicism allantica:
The Middle Ages had left antiq
and exorcised its corpse. The Renaissance stood weeping at its grave and
mnburied and alternately galvanized
tried to resurrect its soul. And in one fatally auspicious moment it suc-
‘This is why the medieval co
ceede
wcept of the Antique was so concrete
and at the same time so incomplete and distorted; whereas the modern
one, gradually developed during the last three or four hundred years,
is comprehensive and consistent but, if | may say so, abstract. And this
is why medieval renascences were transitory; whereas the Renaissance
nuls are intangible but have the advantage
of immortality and omnipresence.’
‘was permanent. Resurrected s
We recognize echoes, in this passage, of Vasari’s and Winckelmann’s eulogies on—
their corresponding idealizations of —the classical revivals of their respective eras.
Itis legitimate, of course, to have and express preferences for resurrected souls over
wandering ghosts (or vice versa). But Panofsky expressed his aesthetic and
metaphorical preferences, here and elsewhere, in a discourse claiming that art his-
tory should be founded on scientific objectivity. Such objectivity apparently con-
sists in the study of “well-defined historical phenomena” rather than vague survivals:
the study of ideas (which are immortal like gods), not of images and motifs (which
are undead like ghosts). Objective art history, moreover, recognizes that there is one
historical moment, a canonical time, without impurity—the Renaissance—when
the homogenous reintegration of form and content became perfectly legible."
34. Panofsky, Renaissance and Renasconces in Western Art,
104-8.
32. Panofsky, Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art, 53
33+ Panofiky; Renaitamnce and Renasconcesin Western Art, 113.
34- On the eventual fate of Panofskian distinctions and
choices, see Orto Demus, “A Renascence of Early Chris
tian Artin the Thirteenth Century in Venice”
sical and Mediaeval Studies in Honor of Albert Matbias Friend,
‘Jr ed. Kurt Weitzman (Princeton, NJ: Princeton Uni-
versity Press, 1955), 348-6r, Ingvar Bergstriim, Revival of
in Late Clas-
Aniguie Usionistic Wall-Painting in Renaissence Art (Gote=
borg: ACTA University of Gothenburg: 1957): Eugenio
Battisti, Paolino Mingazzini, Guglielmo Matthiae, and
Heinz Ladendorf, “Antique Revival,’ in Encyclopaedia of
New York: McGraw Hill,
wkson Vermeule, European
World crt, vol. 1 (19595 Fev. ed
1968), 478-so2; Comelius Cl
Art and the Classical Past (Cambridge:
Press, 1964), 513: Roberto Weiss, The Renaissance Dis-
covery of Classical Antiquity (Oxford: Blackwell, 1969);
Michael Greenhalgh, The Classical Tradition én crt (Lon-
don: Duckworth, 1978), 19-34
Jarvard UniversityObjective art history, in other words, rejects all of Warburg's fundamental
intuitions.
Veritas filia temporis, as the antique adage goes.’ But for the historian, a
question remains: truth is the daughter of precisely which time—or of which
rburg’s disciple, Panofsky began by recognizing how attention to
the history of images and motifs discloses the full complexity and anachronism
of time. In a German text whose title translates as “Ihe Problem of Historical
‘Timey’ Panofsky purposely relied on a medieval example to introduce the dilemma
inherent in any evolutionary model of art history:
Indeed, where but in Reims could a group of sculptures offer so sump-
tuous a sight? It appears, in an endlessly shimmering fabric, that the
most varied threads sometimes intertwine, sometimes create a rigorous
network, sometimes move away from one another, never to be joined
again. Just in itself, the differences in quality, which are at times con-
siderable, prevent us from believing there has been a single evolution
ary line. But, even beyond this example, distinct stylistic trends have not
always developed in the same di
just interpenetrated—they have continued to exist side by side, in spite
of all of the
“systems of reference? which, ata basic level, faces the art historian and
constitutes a world, amounts to a monstrot
ion; they have moreover not always
ing and fro-inj eseemis that this infinite variety of
‘haos, to which it is all but
impossible to lend form... . do we not find ourselves, then, facing a
world that lacks homogeneity, a world in which frozen “systems of re
erence” cohabit (to use Simmel’s terms) in self-sufficient isolation and
irrational singulatity
Panofsky
trying to eradicate th
thus commenced by recognizing the impurity of time. Yet he ended up
impurity, to resolve it, subsume it into an ordered schema
that reestablishes the yearning of art history for aesthetic golden ages (the
Renaissance was one) and reintroduces the enforcement by art history of coher-
ent periods and “s
stems of reference” In this text of 1931, Panofsky concludes
by hoping that a chronology of the Reims sculptur
y the
might one day clari
multiplicity of stylistic systems of reference there and establish a hierarchy among
them.’ An idealist or positivist historian would express Panofsky’s hope as the
intent to achieve purity by analytic means. Approached logically, systematically,
survivals disappear from history, just as residue disappears from good wine. And
35. See Sas, “Veritas Fil
History: E
Klibansky and H. J. Paton (Oxford: Clarendon,
197
‘Tempori
cays Presented to
rust Cassirer, ed. Raymond — 227,
1930),
37+ Panofsky, “Le
33
36. Panofsky,
Perspective eaneme forme symbotique et antres essus, trans. Guy
-e probléme du temps historique,” in La
281
Didi-Huberman + Peace and Mind: Part 5
in Philosophy and Ballangé (1931; French trans., Paris: Minuit, 1975), 223.
probléme du temps historique?’ 228~282
COMMON KNOWLEDGE
yet... without residue, there are only ideal wines—tasteless wines —wines
ing the impurities that, in a sense, give them their style, their life.
In pursuit of meaning in the visual arts, Panofsky hoped to get beyond the
too Nietzschean or too Burkhardtian intuitions that had led to Warburg's obses-
sion with the life and afterlife of images, their Leben and Nachleben. But now, in
turn, Panofskian (or rather, post-Panofskian) iconology has become obsessed
with symbols, ignorant of symptoms, too devoted to chronology, too ignorant of
anachronisms. Our next requisite correction may depend on our understanding
Warburgian “survival” in the context of its dynamic—its morphological and
metapsychological —consequence and implicatior
The recoil from “survival” as a category of art historical attention is attribut-
able to its basic impurity; Nachleben is impure in much the way Leben itself i
Both are messy, cluttered, muddled, various, haphazard, retentive, protean, liq-
uid, oceanic in scope and complexity, impervious to analytical organization.
‘There is no doubt that Panofsky sought to understand the meaning of motifs and
images, but Warburg wanted much more: to understand their “life? their “force”
e are the terms (Leben, Kraft, Macht) that Warburg
used but studiously refrained from defining.*8 This vocabulary derives mostly
or impersonal “power”—the:
from Burckhardt, as Warburg was pleased to observe —and especially from Burck-
hardt’s interest in the conduits between art and daily living (his research into the
role of passing spectacles in Renaissance visual culture is a case in point)? For
Warburg, as for Burckhardt, art was not a simple matter of taste, but a “vital
question? Nor was historiography for either of them a straightforward mat-
ter of chronology, but rather an upheaval, a life struggle in the ongue durée of a
culture.
‘Thus the history of images was for Burckhardt and Warburg a question of
life and death, and thus of survivals. The biomorphism of their vocabulai
ever, has nothing to do with that of Vasari or Winckelmann. For the life in ques-
tion is unnatural and impure (cultural and historical). This enigmatic form of life
can be understood as simultaneously as a play of functions (requiring an anthro-
pological approach), a play of forms (requiring a morphological approach), and
a play of forces (requiring a dynamic approach). Life is, in this context, a play
of functions in that the life meant is that lived by a culture—an inference that
Burckhardt’s first readers did not fail to draw. “Itis to the Italian soul,’ Emile
Gebhardt wrote of Burckhardt in 1887, “that he attributed the secret of the
Renaissance; and by the word culture he meant the intimate state of the con-
38. See Bing, “A. M. Warburg?” 305 40. See Heinrich Wolfiin, Réflexions sur Histoire de Prt,
39. See Go
(10413 French trans., Paris:
Burckhardt, beauty, bis beauty
than a question of taste’
mmarion, 1997), 204: “For
Bch lly Wing So queenssciousness of a people. For him, all the great facts of this history —politics, eru-
dition, art, morals, pleasure, religion, superstition —demonstrate the activity of
a few vital fore
34 "Thankfully, various ambiguities in Burckhardt’s Kultar-
geschichte have been edited out by the soci
| historians who have invoked it, just
as vagaries in Warburg's Kulturwissenschaft have been edited out by the iconolo-
gists and social historians of art who have made use of it-# Still, along with those
ambiguities and vagaries, many of the most crucial suggestions that Burckhardt
and Warburg offered have also been made to disappear. What follow are a few
that Warburg offered more or less explicitly.
First, to the extent that life is a play of functions, it is neither a play of facts
nor one of systems. We must speak tangibly—of a culture’s lifo—as a rejoinder
to positivist historiography (which tends to be reduc
ively chronological, factual,
and discursive) and as a rejoinder to idealist, especially Hegelian historiography
(which tends to be reductively abstract, systematic, and fixated on truth). In both
the idealist and positivist approaches, the historian disincarnat
s time by attempt-
ing to simplify (or rather, deny) its complexity. “Life
culture” might be a for-
mula, given its dramatic difference from established ways of seeing, that is
destined to break with the schematie (and thus trivial) choice we are generally
offered between nature and history or between idea and history:
History is not the
me as nature, and it creates, brings to birth and
abandons to decay in different wa
.. Bya primordi
creates in consistently organic fashion with an infinite variety of spet
and a great similarity of individuals. In history, the variety (within the
one species Lomo, of course) is far from being so gr
nstinct, nature
There are no
clear lines
of demarcation, but individuals feel the incentive inequality —
inciting to development. While nature works
els (verteb
the people, the body soci
on a few primeval mod-
es and invertebrates, phanerogams and cryptograms), in
I is not so much a type as a gradual prod-
uct. ... We shall, further, make no attempt at system, nor la
to “historical principles
observation, taking transverse sections of history in as many dire
any claim
.” On the contrary, we shall confine ourselves to
ions
41. Emile Gebhart, Brutes méridionale: La Renaissance ital-
inne et le philosophie de Vbisoire (Paris, 1887), 4. For later
opinions on Burckharde’s Keltargeschichte, see Karl
Joachim We
sity of Chicago Press, 1966), 115-60; Olga Rubitschon, Brown (Osford: Clarendon, 1995):
ntraub, Visions of Culture (Cl
283
Didi-Huberman - Peace and Mind: Part 5
ago: Univer- in Language and Images of Renaissance Italy, ed. Alison
7-44; Gottried
Elemente einer philoephischen Ambropologie bei Jacob Burck- Boch
bardt (Basel: Druckerei Birkhiiuser, 1981); Felix Gilbert,
“Jacob Burckharde’s Student Years: The Road to Cultural
History,’ Journal ofthe History of Ideas 47.2 (1986): 24-745
and Friedrich Jaeger, Biirgerliche Modernisierungskrise und
historsche Sinnbildung. Kulturgeschicbre bei Droysen, Burck=
hardt und Max Weber (Gottingen: Vandenhoeck and
Ruprecht, 1994), 86
“La critique de Phistoricisme par Jacob Burck-
Revive germanigue internationale, no. 2 (1994): 73-81, in
which he clearly outlines how Burckhard’s work does not
te
clF to sociological readings.284
COMMON KNOWLEDGE
as possible, Above all, we have nothing to do with the philosophy of his-
tory. ... Hegel speaks also of the “purpose of eternal wisdom,” and calls
his study a theodicy by virtue of its recognition of the affirmative in
which the negative (in popular parlance, evil) vanishes, subjected and
overcome.
. We are not, however, privy to the purposes of eternal wis-
dom: they are beyond our ken. This bold assumption of a world plan
leads to fallacies because it starts out from false premises.
Having made this double refusal, Burckhardt commenced to write a third sort of
history." Warburg would come to elucidate the fundamental commitments of
any historian who chooses to write in this vein: to be a philologist beyond fa
(since facts are valuable mainly for the basic issues that they raise) and a philoso-
pher beyond systems (since basic issues are valuable mainly for their singular real-
vation in history). This “third way” for historiography refuses teleologies as utter
pessimisms, and it recognizes the historical being (Daseiz, Leben) —the utter
complexity —of each and every culture, Burckhardt would go so far as to say that
authentic
ory is deformed, not just by ideas that issue from preconceived the-
ries, but even or especially by ideas tha
sue from chronology itself. History
should be, he argued, an effort that dislodges us from our fundamental incapa
ity to “understand that which is varied and accidental” (wnsere Unfibigkeit des Ver-
fiir das Bunte, Zufillige) 5
“This conception of temporality is unusual in that it has no need for the con-
stdndni
cepts
“good” and “evil)” and no need for either beginnings (sources from which
all else must derive) or ends (historical meanings on which all else must con
verge). Good and evil, beginnings and ends, are not essential to accounting for
the complexity, the impurity, of historical life. Temporality on this model is a
dialectic of rhi
patriotic or
mes, repetitions, symptoms. Localized histo
43. Jacob Burckhardt, Force and Freedom:
of History, trans. J. H, Nichols (1868-71; English trans.,
New York, 1943) 72-73, 91-92. See also Werner Kaegi,
Jaco Burckbuerdr: Eine Biographie, vol. 6 (Basel: Schw
1956), 117-43.
{in bnterpretation
44. See Karl Joel, Jacob Burckbardt als Geschichisphilasaph
(Basel: Halbing and Lichtenhahn, 1918); Lowith, “Burck-
hardts Stellung zu Hegels Geschichtsphilosophie,” in
Simtlche Sebriften, vol. 7 (1938 Stuttgart: Metzler, 1984),
(9-38; Lowith, Jacob Burckhardt: Der Mensch inmitten der
Geschichte (1936), in vol. 7 of Sittliche Schriften, 39-361
A. Janner, “II pensiero storico di Jacopo Burckhardl
Qnaderni italo-svizzeri, mo. 9 (1948): 358; Hinrich Knit-
termeyer, Jah Burckhardt: Deusung und Berufuag des
abendlindischen Menschen (Searegart: Hirzel, 1949), 151-76;
J. Emst, “Geschichtsbegriff und Geschicheskritik. b
Jacob Burckhardt, Die Grundlagen der “Weltgeschi
lichen Betrachtungen,”” Zeitschrift irr Religions- und Geis-
tesgeschichte 6 (1954): 32341; R. M. Kingdon, “The Con-
tinuing Utility of Burckhardt’s Thought on Renaissance
Politis," in Jacob Burvkburde and the Renaissance, 100 Years
fier (Lawrence: Museum of Art, University of Kansas,
1g6o): 7133 Eckhard Heftrich, Hegel wd Jacob Burek-
bart, Zar Kriss des gescbichiichen Beccustseins (Prank fart
A.M. Klostermann, 1967); Georg G. Iggers, The German
Conception of History: The National Tradition of Historical
‘Thong firm Herder to the Present (Middletown, CT: Wes-
ley
Burekhardt und die Zunft der Historiker? in Das andere
Wabrncknven. Beitrage aur europaiscken Geschichte ed. Mar-
tin Kintzinger, Wolfgang Stirner, and Johannes Zahiten
(Kiln: Bohlau, 1991), 23~38; and Irmgard Siebert, Jacob
Burckbardt. Studien zur Kunst- und Kulturgescbiektscbrei-
bang (Basel: Schwabe, 1991).
‘Jacob
University Press, 1968); Hurst Fuhrmann,
45. Burckhardt, Weltgescbicbiliche Berrachrangen, ed.
Rudolf Marx (1868—71; Leipzig: A. Kriiner, 1929), 5, 66racial history —is completely foreign to it, because contextualist historiography,
like contextualist philosophy and anthropology, has been incapable of theorizing
relationships of difference w
h any cogency and conviction. But neither is uni-
versal history the objective of Burckhardt’s “third
y.” He refused, from the
commencement of his career, to seek a formula, however intricate, that would
bring the rhizomes, repetitions, and symptoms into a general system:
‘The philosophers, encumbered with sf
culations on origins, ought by
rights to speak of the future. We
-an dispense with theories of origins,
and no one &
n expect from usa theory of the end... . Questions such
as the influence of soil and climate are introductory questions... for the
philosophers of history, but not for us, and hence quite outside our
scope. The same holds good for all cosmologies, theories of race, the
nt continents, and so on. ...The study of
y begin with origins, but not that of
geography of the thre:
ani
any other branch of knowled
history. After all,
historical pictures are, for the most part, pure con-
structions, as we shall see more particularly wh
n we come to speak of
the State. ... ‘There is little value in conclusions drawn from people to
people or from race to race. The origins we imagine we ean demonstrate
are in
quite late stages.%6
‘The preference for contextualist (localized) history results from an eager-
ness for convenience—for information that can be coped with, labeled, managed,
packaged—but its accessibility depends on an optical illusion, and the eagerness
may be accomp
nied by willful blindness. The capacity to tolerate and deal with
an absence of differentiable periods and episteme (to live with an oceanic, unan-
alyzable uni
lacking beginning, end, and formulable meaning) is to say the least
a rare power. Those who, like Burckhardt and especially Warburg, can see their
way to tolerating historical impurity are often moved aside, with the subtlest ges-
tures, by other scholars who do not share or understand that power. In the c:
of Panofsky and Gombrich’s treatment of Warburg, the adversarial feelings t
arc
¢ out of intolerance, misunderstanding, and perhaps fear were presented as
(more simply) condescension to imperfect scholarship. Some of the finest sen-
sibilities have in this way been “corrected” off the map of our intellectual life.
Tris not so much, then, for the sake of justice as for our own peace of mind that
we reverse the exorcism of such affronted and beneficial ghosts.
46. Burckhard, Force and Freedom, 74-75.
285
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