Blasts from the Past: 40 Overlooked Masters Who Still Stire our Souls

Various Utne magazine

Louise Brooks (1906?1985)
Silent film siren Louise Brooks was as scorchingly sexy as any screen goddess who followed, but unlike most of her imitators, she remained her own woman. Brooks spurned the Hollywood star system and made her biggest pictures, Pandora?s Box and Diary of a Lost Girl, in Germany. Nor did she worship at her own altar: Instead of burning out on drink and drugs (or fading away on yogurt and yoga), Brooks retired from the screen to write witty and intelligent essays on the film industry. (Book: Lulu in Hollywood, by Louise Brooks; University of Minnesota Press, 2000,)
?Joseph Hart

Joseph Beuys (1921?1986)
If the spirit of Andy Warhol rules the ?cool? side of contemporary art, this German artist still influences the more mystical and mysterious side. Beuys?one of the founders of the German Green Party?fashioned crude, compelling objects from fat, felt, and wax, and performed visceral rituals that often involved living and dead animals. Serious to the point of solemnity (he called the frequent political lectures he gave in the gallery ?social sculpture?), he served as the earthbound conscience of an art world all too prone to camp and hyperintellectuality. (Book: Joseph Beuys: Mapping the Legacy, ed. by Gene Ray; Distributed Art Publishers, 2001) ?Jon Spayde

Maya Deren (1917?1961)
The surreal mysteries that excite and perturb audiences of today?s avant-garde films, from David Lynch?s to Matthew Barney?s, owe their existence to Maya Deren?s pioneering work of the 1940s and 1950s. A Russian immigrant to New York, Deren adapted the techniques of European surrealist film?haunting repetitive rhythms, strange juxtapositions, abrupt discontinuities, mysterious objects that appear and disappear?to create a new American theater of the mind. In so doing, she virtually invented our underground cinema. Plunging even deeper into mystery, she later became a scholar and initiate of voudoun, Haiti?s African-inspired religion. (Video: Maya Deren: Experimental Films; Mystic Fire Video)
?Abbie Jarman

Arrested Development (1992?1996)
At the height of the
gangsta-rap craze and
fast on the heels of the Rodney King riots in 1992, Arrested Development hit the charts with a single called ?Tennessee? that was?of all things?a hip-hop prayer. The band pioneered a funky, southern-folk beat and promoted an upbeat black pride message charged with spirituality. They split up in 1996, but visionary front man Speech (Todd Thomas) is still recording. (CD: The Best of Arrested Development; EMI-Capitol, 1998) ?Joseph Hart

Marie Taglioni (1804?1884) and Fanny Elssler (1810?1884)
One of the principal artistic fault lines of the
19th century was between the ethereal ballerina Taglioni and her archrival, the earthy and sensual Elssler (left). (Their loyal fans came to blows when the two appeared simultaneously in Paris.) Taglioni pioneered the romantic ballet as we know it; she was one of the first dancers on pointe, and the first to wear leotard, tights, and tutu; Elssler was the first to incorporate folk dance into ballet.
The gamine/earth mother contrast was reflected in their lives, too: Taglioni was trained, managed, and dominated by her tyrannical father, who squandered her income and left her penniless. The shrewd Elssler toured America and amassed a fortune. Taglioni suffered a painful divorce; Elssler had several warm love affairs and two children. Popular passion for the divas only increased after they died: Russian fans of Taglioni consumed a sauce made from one of her ballet slippers, and Elssler?s devotees purchased ceramic copies of her hand. (Book: Ballerina: The Art of Women in Classical Ballet, by
Mary Clarke; Princeton Book Co., 1988)
?Joseph Hart

Rabindranath Tagore (1861?1941)
Once as famous as Einstein, with whom he publicly discussed the meaning of life, this Nobel Prize?winning poet, dramatist, novelist, and thinker led a literary renaissance in his native Bengal and presented a modern version of the wisdom of India to the West. Tagore was a shrewd idealist who felt that East and West had much to teach each other on the road to a better world for all; openly admiring elements of British culture, he could still denounce imperialism in ringing words. (Book: Tagore: An Anthology; ed. by Krishna Dutta; St. Martin?s, 1997)
?Jon Spayde

Tina Modotti (1896?1942)
A still life with guitar, bullets, and sickle; an achingly beautiful portrait of a pregnant farmworker holding a child?Modottti?s ostensibly leftist photography captures the sensuous details of real human lives caught up in revolution and fuses the personal with the political in powerful ways. In 1923 she went to Mexico with her lover (and photography mentor) Edward Weston and became friends with artist Frida Kahlo and her circle. A photographer for only seven years, Modotti abandoned her art to serve the Communist Party in Europe. (Book: Tina Modotti: Radical Photographer, by Margaret Hooks; Da Capo, 2000) ?Karen Olson

Johnny Hodges (1906?1970)
Many midcentury jazz greats were honored with authoritative nicknames like Duke, Count, and Pres, so it?s easy to dismiss a saxophonist known to his friends as Rabbit. But don?t do it. Soulful and sensuous on the alto sax, Johnny Hodges shone brightly during four decades in Duke Ellington?s horn section, and on smooth and sultry recordings of his own. ?Our band will never sound the same,? Ellington said when Hodges died. (CD: Johnny Hodges: Verve Jazz Masters; Verve, 1994)
?Jay Walljasper

Little Walter (1930?1968)
Marion Walter Jacobs virtually reinvented the harmonica by playing right into a handheld microphone, transforming his down-home folk instrument into the ?Mississippi saxophone.? He made his name as a sideman on Muddy Waters? Chicago blues classics, but his own ?50s recordings match the very best of Muddy?s. Rocking hard, with jazz and swing undertones, they offer the perfect setting for his slow-burning vocals. (CD: Little Walter: His Best; Chess/MCA, 1997; Book: Blues With a Feeling: The Little Walter Story, by Tony Glover, Scott Dirks, and Ward Gaines; Routledge, 2002)
?Jay Walljasper

Jack Smith (1932?1989)
His notorious Flaming Creatures (1963), a sweet-natured polysexual carnival of cavorting bodies, made Smith a father of underground cinema, but his offbeat live performances, passion for old Hollywood films, and taste for dumpster-and-thrift-shop fabulousness were equally important
in shaping a gay aesthetic that?s influenced everybody from filmmaker John Waters to playwright-director Charles Ludlam. Best of all, Smith was a permission-giver. ?Make perfect art and you will be admired,? he wrote. ?Make imperfect art and you will be loved.? (Book: On Jack Smith?s Flaming Creatures and Other Secret Flix of Cinemaroc, by J. Hoberman; Granary Books, 2001)
?Jon Spayde

Eubie Blake (1883?1983)
Joints always jumped when Eubie Blake played, and his buoyant piano rags still roll through our collective consciousness, even if a chap named Joplin gets much of the credit for ragtime. Blake (at right, above) helped pave the way for jazz with his free-spirited playing.
He also brought black culture to Broadway with his revues written with Noble Sissle, and helped fuel th
e Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s. Blake lived for a full century and never tired of playing or promoting his spirited, syncopated music. (CD: Memories of
You; Biograph, 1990)
?Keith Goetzman

The Pogues (1982?1996)
If Bob Dylan had been born 15 years later somewhere in the vicinity of Ireland and met up with the Clash, his music might have sounded something like the Pogues?. An intoxicating blend of punk energy and Celtic soul, they took London by storm in the mid-1980s, reintroducing folk-rock to a new generation. (CD: If I Should Fall from Grace with God; Phantom, 1997)
?Jay Walljasper

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749?1832)
No writer of any era had a more dynamic view of the interrelationships of all phenomena, from the tiniest microorganism to the sweep of history?or more faith in life?s potential?than Germany?s great 18th-century poet, dramatist, critic, novelist, and scientist. His play Faust may be too complex and crowded for easy staging, but it is a compelling, dreamlike exploration of the energies of existence, and his life and opinions are fascinating. Always ready to redefine himself and stretch his work in new directions, Goethe explored many visions over a long life. (Book: Goethe: A Critical Introduction, by Ronald Gray; Cambridge University Press, 1967)
?Jon Spayde

Lady Murasaki Shikibu (c. 978?1031)
In the hyperrefined imperial court of 11th-century Japan, Murasaki was a wallflower: shy, ill-tempered, and, worst of all for a female, bookish (her unconventional father had let her read the Chinese classics as a girl). What Murasaki was doing all alone in her room was writing the world?s first novel, The Tale of Genji, a brilliant story of love and feminine psychology that anticipates Proust by a thousand years and has become a classic of world literature. Arthur Waley?s sensitive 1920s translation is a gem of English literature, too. (Book: The Tale of Genji, by Murasaki Shikibu; Modern Library/ Random House, 1993)
?Jon Spayde

Dorothea Tanning (1910?)
Born in Illinois, this painter joined the New York circle of ?migr? European artists in the 1930s. In 1942 surrealist legend Max Ernst encountered her self-portrait, Birthday, in which she depicts herself as a somnambulistic wanderer down mysterious corridors, and fell in love with both painting and painter. Refusing to be overshadowed by her partner, Tanning went on making images of occult female power, among the most technically accomplished and haunting paintings in the surrealist tradition. Still active at 92, she now paints gigantic imaginary flowers in dreamlike colors. (Book: Between Lives: An Artist and Her World, by Dorothea Tanning; W.W. Norton, 2001)
?Jon Spayde

Umm Kulthumm (1904?1975)
The greatest diva who ever lived? Any cab driver in Cairo will tell you it was Umm Kulthumm, the turbo-throated Egyptian beauty whose voice still resonates from radios and tape decks wherever the Arab diaspora has spread. Kulthumm (or Kalsoum, or Kalthum?transcriptions vary) went from peasant girl to singing stateswoman for Egypt and the Arab world, partly because of her populist appeal and quick embrace of new media?radio, TV, film?but mainly because of her incredible voice. She became, and remains, the ?Voice of Egypt.? (CD: Umm Kalthum 2000; Piranha, 2001)
?Keith Goetzman

Kabir (1440?1518)
Born a Muslim in northern India, Kabir studied with a Hindu guru?but in his rough-hewn spiritual verse he declares independence from both faiths, praising a God beyond sects and slamming greedy gurus and pompous imams alike. With the fierceness of a Zen master, he encourages seekers to shun illusion and embrace their own truth: ?I?ve burned my own house down,? he sings. ?Now I?ll burn down the house of anyone / Who wants to follow me.? (Book: The Kabir Book, translated by Robert Bly; Beacon Press, 1993)
?Jon Spayde

Th?odore G?ricault (1791?1824)
A chaotic genius, G?ricault helped overthrow the chilly neoclassicism that dominated art at the beginning of the 19th century. His most celebrated work, The Raft of the ?Medusa,? upset the canons of French art by using the gigantic scale of history paintings to tell a tale right out of the newspapers: a scandal-tinged shipwreck. The sensation that this overwhelmingly dramatic and up-to-the-minute painting caused blew fresh air into the art establishment and helped set the stage for the triumph of romanticism. Later, he plumbed psychological depths in his portraits of the insane patients of a doctor friend. G?ricault rejected formal art training, studying instead in galleries of the Louvre (until he was banned for fighting); he had an affair?and a child?with his own aunt; and he died young after a fall from his horse. (Book: G?ricault: His Life and Work, by Lorenz Eitne; Cornell University Press, 1983) ?Joseph Hart

Henry Cowell (1897?1965)
A playful innovator who followed his own ear rather than convention, Henry Cowell composed enduring modern classical works. He taught himself the piano as a boy, and despite his extensive later musical training, his compositions retain the sense of playful discovery?ranging from sensual, atonal works for scratched, rubbed, and plucked piano strings, to charming and intricate little songs. His fascination with rhythm and international musical traditions keeps his music approachable and intellectually engaging. A formidable theorist, he invented new notations and explored topics ranging from the then new ?mechanical recording? to music theory. Cowell published scores of essays (with his uncredited wife, Sidney Hawkins Robertson Cowell) that helped turn obscure contemporaries and disciples like Charles Ives and John Cage into luminaries. (Book: Essential Cowell: Selected Writings on Music, by Henry Cowell; McPherson & Co., 2002)
?Joseph Hart

Julia Morgan (1872?1957)
According to legend, William Randolph Hearst plucked Julia Morgan out of obscurity and set her to work designing the strange, vast, faux-Spanish mansion in San Simeon, California, that came to be known as Hearst Castle. Not so. The architect had been the first woman admitted to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris (after two years of trying); then she?d established a thriving practice in California that (thanks in part to the 1906 San Francisco earthquake) eventually produced nearly 800 buildings. (Web site: www.hearstcastle.org) ?Joseph Hart

Ladies Against Women (LAW) (founded 1981)
They gained widespread notice at the 1984 Republican convention when, dressed as ?50s housewives, these satirical Ladies (and a few cross-dressed men) waved banners reading ?Born to Clean? and ?Ban the Poor.? Under the direction of their always ladylike leader, Mrs. Chester Cholesterol (Gail Ann Williams), the San Francisco?
based performance-art pranksters wreaked polite havoc during the Reagan era, demanding repeal of women?s suffrage (?Suffering, not suffrage, keeps us on our pedestals?) and abolition of the environment (?It takes up too much space, and is almost impossible to keep clean?). (Web site: www.well.com/user/gail/ladies) ?Laine Bergeson

Plastic People of the Universe (founded 1968)
A lot of rock bands have sung about
revolution, but the Plastic People of the Universe actually helped bring one about. All hopped up on smuggled Frank Zappa and Velvet Underground records, the dissident Czech experimentalists jammed their way into history as the house band of Czechoslovakia?s emerging ?velvet revolution.? Harassed, banned, and sometimes imprisoned, they persevered until their friend, avant-garde playwright Vaclav Havel, became president. Now that?s rock and roll. (Book: The Plastic People of the Universe, ed. by Jaroslav Riedel; Mat?a, 1999)
?Keith Goetzman

Mildred Wirt Benson (Carolyn Keene) (1905?2002)
An accidental foremother of grrl power, Benson was the original author of the Nancy Drew novels, writing under the pseudonym Carolyn Keene. She eventually penned 23 sagas of the plucky, resourceful, and cool-headed young sleuth. Though she denied any political agenda as a writer (?I don?t align [Nancy] with the feminist movement,? she insisted), Benson herself was a living example of empowered womanhood; she flew airplanes into her 80s and once got lost alone in the Amazon jungle. She set precedents as a businesswoman, too, leaving the series during the Depression because she wouldn?t work for reduced pay from the publisher. (Books: Nancy Drew series published by Aladdin Paperbacks)
?Laine Bergeson

d.a. levy (1942?1968)
Proudly lower-case like e.e. cummings, levy was Cleveland?s wild man of poetry in the 1960s. A supercharged cross between William Blake and Lenny Bruce, levy wrote blazing visionary verse, created dense collages, published an underground paper called The Buddhist Third-Class Junkmail Oracle, and did everything he could to scandalize Ohio authorities and prove that the fires of revolt burned bright in flyover country. (Book: The Buddhist Third-Class Junkmail Oracle: The Art and Poetry of d.a. levy, ed. by Mike Golden; Seven Stories, 1999)
?Jon Spayde

Floyd Dell (1887?1969)
You could call him the bohemian version of F. Scott Fitzgerald: a bright young Midwesterner who chronicled the social and psychic forces that powered early-20th-century America?but from a working-class, radical perspective. Dell made his name as an editor of the legendary leftist magazine The Masses, as an eloquent advocate for feminism and psychotherapy, and as a leading light of both the Chicago literary renaissance and Greenwich Village. His unjustly forgotten fiction and essays chronicle the heyday of America?s first counterculture. (Book: Floyd Dell: The Life and Times of an American Radical, by Douglas Clayton; Ivan R. Dee, 1994)
?Jay Walljasper

Halldor Laxness (1902?1998)
Despite writing his books in Icelandic and espousing outspoken socialist views, Laxness managed to win the wider literary world?s attention, and eventually the Nobel Prize, in 1955. While the lives of sheep farmers near the Arctic Circle and domestic servants in Reykjavik may seem remote, his portraits of these people evoke the human resilience that redeems us all, in prose widely hailed for its simple, transcendent beauty. (Book: Independent People, by Halldor Laxness; Vintage, 1997)
?Jay Walljasper

Judson Dance Theater
(founded 1962)
In the early ?60s, the Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village became the incubator of avant-garde dance in America. Here, disciples of choreographer Merce Cunningham and composer, poet, and all-
purpose innovator John Cage staged experimental performances in which dance lost its formal pretensions?at times becoming indistinguishable from walking, or morphing into acrobatic roller-skating. Among the corps who redefined contemporary dance forever at Judson was multi-art diva Meredith Monk, who, like Cunningham, is still active today. (Book: Democracy?s Body: Judson Dance Theater 1962?1964, by Sally Banes, Duke University Press, 1993)
?Joseph Hart

Paul Goodman (1911?1972)
For those perplexed by what anarchism is and isn?t, and what it can mean for all of us, the political and literary works of Paul Goodman are a path toward clarity. Author of the classic social critique Growing Up Absurd, as well as many works of poetry, fiction, and literary criticism, Goodman had broad intellectual reach and considerable political courage. And at a time of stultified social mores, he was an authentic bohemian who flaunted his bisexuality and challenged fellow ?radicals? to live their ideals. (Book: Creator Spirit Come!, by Paul Goodman; Free Life Editions, 1977)
?Craig Cox

The Rascals (1965?1972)
Perhaps the least celebrated of great ?60s rock groups, the Rascals made music that sounds remarkably fresh and full today. They were pioneers of blue-eyed soul and were so good at it that R&B star Otis Redding is said to have once stuck his head into their recording studio to say, ?I just wanted to see for myself if you guys were really white.? Their raucous, uplifting 1968 testament ?People Got to Be Free? proved that the band?s cross-racial solidarity was political as well as musical. Indeed, the Rascals combined the two best things about the ?60s?an idealistic social ethos and a good-time spirit. (CD: The Very Best of the Rascals; Rhino, 1993)
?Jay Walljasper

Muriel Rukeyser (1913?1980)
Poet, biographer, essayist, translator, playwright, children?s author, and tireless champion of the underclasses, Muriel Rukeyser is a model of the engaged writer. She wrote dense, resonant poetry that was determinedly high-cultural, but refused a poet?s detachment; her most famous act of poetic activism was an investigation and commemoration of the deaths of hundreds of workers poisoned by silica dust on a West Virginia hydroelectric project. Rukeyser was a ?daring visionary,? wrote critic Florence Howe, ?ahead of her time in thinking about the arts, their connection to science, their function in an increasingly merciless world.? (Book: A Muriel Rukeyser Reader; ed. by Jan Heller Levi; W.W. Norton, 1994)
?Joseph Hart

John Ruskin (1819?1900)
An odd man who lived a sheltered and sad life, Ruskin changed the world?s mind about the value of landscape painting, Gothic architecture, and medieval cities. As modern industrialism took ferocious hold in Victorian England, his lyrical and thoughtful books reminded the public about the pleasures and achievements of the past. A social critic as well as an artistic one, he also spoke out against the misuse of wealth and abuse of the working class. (Book: Selected Writings; ed. by Kenneth Clark; Penguin Classics, 1992) ?Jay Walljasper

Johann Stamitz (1717?1757)
The Czech-born director of the court orchestra at Mannheim, Germany, was one of the quiet transformers of classical music. Stamitz created a more complex version of the sonata form, with more intricate bass parts, and his demanding performance standards insured a new level of virtuosity and helped the Mannheim ensemble develop a ?bigger? and more beautiful sound than typical baroque players. His innovations charted a path to the classical symphony as practiced by Mozart. (CD: Johann Stamitz, Symphonies Vol. 1; Naxos, 1996)
?Jon Spayde

Wolfgang Koeppen (1906?1996)
West German writers, led by Gnter Grass, began facing up to the Nazi legacy in the 1960s. One novelist preceded them by a decade, and paid dearly for it. Koeppen?s novels of the 1950s portrayed ?good Germans? as still ruinously infected with Nazism. Critics savaged him, and he was unread for decades. While other German writers experimented with fragmentation, Koeppen presented his haunted characters in a rich, ironic language redolent of the old high culture of Wagner and Goethe. The result: books that don?t just indict Germany?they call a whole civilization to account. (Books: The Hothouse and Death in Rome; by Wolfgang Koeppen; both W.W. Norton, 2001) ?Jon Spayde

Jens Jensen (1860?1951)
A Danish immigrant, Jensen started out in the 1880s as a laborer for the Chicago Park District and ended up leaving a mark on the American landscape almost as distinctive as Central Park architect Frederick Law Olmsted?s. Adapting Prairie Style architecture?s emphasis on organic unity to the design of parks and gardens, Jensen created masterpieces such as Garfield, Humboldt, and Columbus parks in Chicago and The Clearing, his folk school in Wisconsin?s Door County. He also pioneered progressive approaches to landscape architecture: urban community gardens, neighborhood parks and playgrounds, the use of wildflowers and other native species in garden design, and citizen activism to preserve unique natural settings. (Web site: www.jensjensen.org)
?Jay Walljasper

Robert Edmond Jones (1887?1954)
Nineteenth-century theatrical sets looked like elaborate oil paintings: so visually cluttered, you could barely make out the actors. Drawing on innovations in Europe, and working with giants like Eugene O?Neill, Robert Edmond Jones gave American scene design the vigor of modern art. He created stripped-down, expressive sets bathed in subtle, emotionally rich lighting?thus adding visual poetry to the poetry of the new drama. (Book: The Dramatic Imagination, by Robert Edmond Jones, Methuen Theater Arts Books, 1987)
?Jon Spayde

John Dos Passos (1896?1970)
A roaring lion of ?20s and ?30s American literature who expressed sharply radical views in acclaimed novels, Dos Passos seems now to have left his mark only on a jazz-pop vocal group named after one of his great works, Manhattan Transfer. This is surprising, since his groundbreaking style?incorporating headlines, song lyrics, historical sketches, and slice-of-life scenes in cinema-like montages?fits so perfectly into the postmodern sensibility that dominates the arts today. (Book: USA trilogy, by John Dos Passos; Library of America, 1996)
?Jay Walljasper

Fran?ois Villon (1431?1463)
Bad-boy and bad-girl storytellers from Arthur Rimbaud to Public Enemy have an ancestor in this great poet of the mean streets of medieval Paris. Villon?s rap sheet began with a murder in 1453; later, his adventures with thieves inspired him to write ballads in slang. His Testaments are bitterly ironic wills, leaving his possessions to friends and enemies. And the haunting ?Ballad of the Hanged Men? was probably written when he himself was awaiting the noose. (Book: Fran?ois Villon?s The Legacy and the Testament, translated by Louis Simpson; Story Line Press, 2000)
?Jon Spayde

Mary Wollstonecraft (1759?1797)
A radical freethinker and protofeminist, Wollstonecraft hurried to France in 1792 to observe the revolution firsthand. Back in London, she threw in her lot with Thomas Paine, William Blake, and other literary radicals, writing passionate accounts of the revolution, as well as children?s books, reviews, and travelogues. Her enduring A Vindication of the Rights of Women is a scathing critique of a philosophy of women?s education that left women caged ?like the feathered race, [with] nothing to do but to plume themselves, and stalk with mock majesty from perch to perch.? (Book: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, by Mary Wollstonecraft; Modern Library, 2001)
?Joseph Hart

B. Traven (1890?1969)
No one knows the true story of the man behind the name, though 20 years after his death, his wife identified him as Ret Marut, a German anarchist who fled Europe to save his life. But Ret Marut was also an assumed name, and his true identity remains a mystery. Even though his origins are obscure, his prose is unmistakably clear. In dozens of stories and novels (including Treasure of the Sierra Madre, the famous chronicle of the process by which ?man becomes the slave of his property?), Traven?s taut, masculine style makes Hemingway seem fussy. Yet he shows great sensitivity to the nuances of character and a moralist?s unflinching clarity in depicting the subtle shades of human cruelty. (Book: The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, by B. Traven; Hill and Wang, 1996)
?Joseph Hart

Alan Hovhaness (1911?2000)
Audiences loved this astonishingly prolific composer?s lush, openly emotional music; critics hated it. (Leonard Bernstein reportedly dismissed Hovhaness? work as ?filthy.?) Neither an ivory-tower intellectual nor a pandering populist, Hovhaness followed his own path, studying firsthand the musical and spiritual traditions of the Far East, and adapting them for many deceptively simple, richly melodic compositions.?My purpose is to create music not for snobs,? he said, ?but for all people . . . music which is beautiful and healing.? (CD: Music of Alan Hovhaness; Crystal Records, 1993) ?Joseph Hart