The Art of Franz Kafka: Drawings from 1907-1917
in
Art, Books |
February 4th, 2014
UK-born, Chicago-based artist Philip Hartigan has posted a brief video piece about Franz Kafka’s
drawings. Kafka, of course, wrote a body of work, mostly never
published during his lifetime, that captured the absurdity and the
loneliness of the newly emerging modern world:
In The Metamorphosis, Gregor transforms overnight into a giant cockroach; in The Trial,
Josef K. is charged with an undefined crime by a maddeningly
inaccessible court. In story after story, Kafka showed his protagonists
getting crushed between the pincers of a faceless bureaucratic authority
on the one hand and a deep sense of shame and guilt on the other.
On his deathbed, the famously tortured writer implored his friend Max Brod
to burn his unpublished work. Brod ignored his friend’s plea and
instead published them – novels, short stories and even his diaries. In
those diaries, Kafka doodled incessantly – stark, graphic drawings
infused with the same angst as his writing. In fact, many of these
drawings have ended up gracing the covers of Kafka’s books.
“Quick, minimal movements that convey the
typical despairing mood of his fiction” says Hartigan of Kafka’s art. “I
am struck by how these simple gestures, these zigzags of the wrist,
contain an economy of mark making that even the most experienced artist
can learn something from.”
In his book Conversations with Kafka,
Gustav Janouch describes what happened when he came upon Kafka in
mid-doodle: the writer immediately ripped the drawing into little pieces
rather than have it be seen by anyone. After this happened a couple
times, Kafka relented and let him see his work. Janouch was astonished.
“You really didn’t need to hide them from me,” he complained. “They’re
perfectly harmless sketches.”
“Kafka
slowly wagged his head to and fro – ‘Oh no! They are not as harmless as
they look. These drawing are the remains of an old, deep-rooted
passion. That’s why I tried to hide them from you…. It’s not on the
paper. The passion is in me. I always wanted to be able to draw. I
wanted to see, and to hold fast to what was seen. That was my passion.”
Check out some of Kafka’s drawings below:
Runner 1907-1908
Horse and Rider 1909-1910
Three Runners 1912-1913
The Thinker 1913
Fencing 1917
via ArtsCentre
Related Content:
Find Works by Kafka in our Free eBooks collection
Watch Franz Kafka, the Wonderful Animated Film by Piotr Dumala
The Art of William Faulkner: Drawings from 1916-1925
Vladimir Nabokov Makes Editorial Tweaks to Franz Kafka’s Novella
Vladimir Nabokov’s Delightful Butterfly Drawings
Jonathan Crow is a Los Angeles-based writer and
filmmaker whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The Hollywood Reporter, and
other publications. You can follow him at @jonccrow.
No comments :
Post a Comment