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              a pertinent work, theorising on the deep affinities between W.C. 
              Williams’s poetry and the visual arts (including photography), 
              Peter Halter states that the development of Modernism in general 
              and of Modernist literature in particular was the result of “an 
              unprecedented collaboration between painters, poets, musicians, 
              and critics on both sides of the Atlantic.”1 Within this very 
              complex movement, William Carlos Williams stands out as the case 
              of a poet who managed to successfully integrate in his work ideas 
              and concepts from the revolutionary visual arts. Of all poets who showed a growing interest in exploring and experimenting 
              with the visual arts, Williams’s case is a most complex one. 
              He presents an interesting and challenging perspective on integrating 
              modern painting in his work, because, as Peter Schmidt points out: 
              “Williams paid close attention to three quite different art 
              movements.”2 Schmidt goes on to mention the fact that William 
              Blake, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Ezra Pound also tried to “turn 
              paintings into poems and saw poems become paintings.”3 But 
              unlike Williams, none of the poets managed to establish a deeper 
              relationship and involvement with the visual arts. Blake was not 
              interested in collaborating with any art movements of his time. 
              Rossetti and his fellow pre-Raphaelites followed a rather traditional 
              and uniform style and subject matter in their works. As for Pound, 
              his artist friends influenced him in his poems in a rather problematic 
              way and “the single most important influence on Pound – 
              the ideogram – was largely his own invention.”4
 Williams, on the other hand, had never been a stranger to the visual 
              arts. His mother initiated him quite early in his life into the 
              intricate and equally challenging world of still lifes as she had 
              studied painting in Paris. Williams even showed some skill as a 
              Sunday painter. Poetry, he said, finally won out as more fitting 
              to a doctor’s busy schedule. In addition to that, Williams’ 
              closest friends were painters and/or collectors and he made regular 
              weekend visits, frequenting the informal salons of Alfred Stieglitz, 
              Walter Arensberg, Alfred Kreymborg, Man Ray, and others.
 So it is not surprising that Williams paid close attention to three 
              quite different art movements. The first one was Stieglitz’s 
              school of photographers and precisionist painters; the second one 
              was European Cubism and its American adaptations and the third one 
              was the Dada-Surrealism juncture. To these, one could add Postimpressionism, 
              Vorticism, Fauvism, Expressionism – movements with which Williams 
              was in contact through such artist friends as Pound, Demuth, Hartley, 
              Sheeler, etc.
 The visual arts constituted a main and constant source of inspiration 
              in Williams’ poems because all modernist movements stressed 
              the autonomous nature of the work of art and insisted, in the words 
              of the Cubists, on the painting as a fait pictural. In other words, 
              all these movements shunned total abstraction and insisted on the 
              necessity of figuration, pointing out that art could not abandon 
              the connection with the empirical world because, if it did, it lost 
              its deeper meaning. Williams’s poetics bears a close resemblance 
              to the ideas upheld by the modernist movements in the sense that 
              he is cognisant of the double awareness of the work of art as a 
              separate reality and as a contact with the world at large. It is 
              no wonder then that both the object character of the work and its 
              contact with the empirical world are at work in Williams’s 
              poems.
 The insistence on contact developed by Williams in his poems was 
              related to a need to create a genuine American art. And this could 
              be done only by going back to one’s immediate environment. 
              All viable art had to identify the particulars of such an environment 
              so as to make the particular become universal, as Williams never 
              tired to point this out. Williams considered that the poet could 
              be “both local (all art is local) and at the same time surmount 
              that restriction by climbing to the universal in all art.”5 
              Poetry then, like all art, had the healing effect to “lift 
              an environment to expression.”6 The artist who tried to be 
              first a modernist and second a poet, he who tried to be “a 
              mirror to this modernity,”7 adapted the principles of European 
              Cubism to the immediate needs of America in all its aspects-including 
              the numerous things banished from traditional art as banal and ugly.
 Williams’s exploration of the basic tension between the artefact 
              and the thing-world, concrete and abstract, the one and the many, 
              arises from the achievements in the visual arts, ranging from Gris’s 
              Synthetic Cubism to Duchamp’s ready-mades and the Precisionist 
              adaptations of Futurism and Cubism developed by Williams’s 
              artist friends Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler.
 Both Williams and Demuth were equally interested in painting and 
              literature. If Williams had played with the idea of becoming a painter, 
              Demuth couldn’t make up his mind whether to become a poet 
              or a painter until as late as 1914. The two friends developed the 
              same view of the goals of Modernism and the American scene due probably 
              to their lifelong close friendship and their mutual artistic interests. 
              This also explains their collaboration with the three avant-garde 
              movements patronized by Arensberg, Kreymborg, and Stieglitz.
 Williams, Demuth and Marsden Hartley were among the critics and 
              artists of the New York avant-garde of the 1910s and 1920s who were 
              interested in and enthusiastic about the relationship established 
              between painting, poetry, and other art forms after the Armory Show. 
              Each of them, in their own way, tried to move towards a genuine 
              American art. They were fascinated by what was going on around Stieglitz, 
              Arensberg, and Kreymborg and could not but agree to such new periodicals 
              as The Soil and The Seven Arts that promoted all that was regarded 
              as typical of American civilisation. But they also opposed a too 
              facile acceptance of the so-called American values and all the technological 
              things, since this often happened at the expense of ignoring or 
              belittling what had happened in Europe.
 In their manifesto in the first number of Contact, Williams and 
              Robert McAlmon wrote: “We will be American, because we are 
              of America…Particularly we will adopt no aggressive or inferior 
              attitude toward ‘imported thought’ or art.” And 
              in a “Comment” for the second number, Williams stated 
              that the Americans had to become aware of their own culture so that 
              they should not “stupidly fail to learn from foreign work 
              or stupidly swallow it without knowing how to judge its essential 
              values.”8 This was also Demuth’s position. He was interested 
              in all aspects of contemporary American civilisation, including 
              those that were considered banal and ugly by the defenders of a 
              traditional “high culture”: circus, vaudeville and the 
              (night) life and entertainment in the big cities. With Williams 
              he shared a keen sense of the comic, especially when it meant ridiculing 
              the solemn high-mindedness and reverence for Art that they found 
              omnipresent in the conservative public around them.
 There existed obvious differences between Williams and Demuth as 
              well. Williams felt part of the local environment and part of the 
              avant-garde. He tried to bring these two worlds nearer in his art, 
              which was deeply rooted in the mundane and the local. Demuth, on 
              the other hand, was more detached and less passionately involved 
              than his friend. He cultivated the image of the dandy and was much 
              drawn to the inscrutable and ironic detachment of his friend Marcel 
              Duchamp.
 Demuth shared with Williams the sense of being surrounded by a large 
              public that was either hostile to them or not interested at all 
              in what they were doing. But while for Williams this feeling had 
              the effect of an incentive, it made Demuth often doubt whether the 
              effort was really worthwhile. Nevertheless, in 1921, after a prolonged 
              stay in Europe, Demuth’s decision was final – he would 
              stay in America and devote himself to an art that was to be the 
              result of the joint effort of the avant-garde to respond to, and 
              cope with, the contemporary civilisation to which they belonged. 
              “Together,” he wrote to Stieglitz, “we will add 
              to the American scene…”9
 Notes:1. Halter, Peter. Introduction, The Revolution in the Visual Arts 
              and the Poetry of William Carlos Williams (Cambridge: Cambridge 
              University Press, 1991),
 2. Schmidt, Peter, “Some Versions of Modernist Pastoral: Williams 
              and the Precisionists,” Contemporary Literature, 21:3 (1980): 
              382.
 3. Ibid.
 4. Ibid.
 5. The Selected Letters of William Carlos Williams. Ed. John C. 
              Thirlwall (New York: McDowell, Obolensky, 1957), 268.
 6. Ibid.
 7. The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams. Volume 1: 1909-1939. 
              Ed. Christopher McGowan (New York: New Directions, 1986), 108.
 8. Contact, 1 (Dec. 1920); Contact, 2 (Jan. 1921): 11-12.
 9. Letters to Alfred Stieglitz, 31 August 1921 and 10 October 1921, 
              The Alfred Stieglitz Collection, YALC.
 
 
 
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