Angry Penguins

Cover of the December 1945 issue of Angry Penguins, designed by Albert Tucker

Angry Penguins was an Australian literary and artistic avant-garde movement of the 1940s. The movement was stimulated by a modernist magazine of the same name published by the surrealist poet Max Harris, who founded the magazine in 1940, at the age of 18.

Angry Penguins was first published in the South Australian capital of Adelaide. The title is derived from a phrase in Harris' poem "Mithridatum of Despair": "as drunks, the angry penguins of the night", and its use as a magazine title was suggested to Harris by C. R. Jury.[1] The magazine's main Adelaide rivals were the Jindyworobaks, a nationalist and anti-modernist literary movement inspired by Indigenous Australian culture and the Australian bush ballad tradition. According to Angry Penguins poet Geoffrey Dutton, "we stayed with Yeats, Eliot and Auden, ... and left Lawson and Paterson to the Jindys."[2] In 1942, Harris gained the patronage of John and Sunday Reed in Melbourne, and the magazine subsequently moved to the couple's home at Heide (now the Heide Museum of Modern Art).

The Angry Penguins were early Australian exponents of surrealism and expressionism. This led James McAuley and Harold Stewart during their time at the Directorate of Research and Civil Affairs to create the group's most famous event, the Ern Malley hoax and the subsequent trial for indecency.

Members of the painting group included John Perceval, Arthur Boyd, Sidney Nolan, Danila Vassilieff, Albert Tucker and Joy Hester.

The Angry Penguins movement was surveyed in the 1988 exhibition Angry Penguins and Realist Painting in Melbourne in the 1940s, held at the Hayward Gallery in London.[3] In the exhibition's catalogue, English novelist C. P. Snow is quoted as saying that the Angry Penguins movement "was probably the last flowering of a 'national' modernism that a completely internationalised world of the arts was likely to see".[4]

The Ern Malley Hoax

The Ern Malley hoax is the publication’s most famous event. James McAuley and Harold Stewart submitted a group of poems that fit in with the typical submissions featured in the magazine, and attributed them to a recently deceased young poet named Ern Malley, who did not actually exist. These poems were actually constructed as a pastiche of fragments pasted together nonsensically; McAuley and Stewart were critical of Modernism, and wanted to prove that it has no inherent value.[5] The poems were received and published with great enthusiasm of the creators and patrons of the magazine. When it was revealed to be a hoax, the publication received negative backlash, and the affair tarnished the image of the magazine.[6]

Criticism

The Communist Party of Australia publicly criticized Angry Penguins in the August 1944 issue of the Communist Review, claiming that the magazine “has nothing to offer to Australian art, and that its effect will be to destroy, not raise Australian standards.”[7] O’Connor writes that editors of cultural publications are responsible for fostering cultural development as a part of the overall advancement of “standards of social and economic life in Australia,” and that the editors of Angry Penguins are “completely indifferent” to this.[7]

Legacy and influence

In Richard Flanagan's Booker Prize-winning novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North (2013), the main character, Dorrigo Evans, meets the love of his life at the launch of Angry Penguins.

See also

References

  1. Nick Harvey et al. "A History of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Adelaide 1876-2012" (PDF). University of Adelaide. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  2. Dutton, Geoffrey. Out in the Open: An Autobiography. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 1995. ISBN 0702228109, p. 86
  3. Keon, Michael (1 August 1989). "Angry Penguins at home and abroad", The Age.
  4. Hayward Gallery. Angry Penguins and Realist Painting in Melbourne in the 1940s. London: South Bank Centre, 1988. ISBN 1853320218.
  5. Phiddian, Robert. “Are Parody and Deconstruction Secretly the Same Thing?” New Literary History, Vol. 28, No. 4. 1997. JSTOR 20057449
  6. Lloyd, Brian. “Ern Malley and His Rivals.” Australian Literary Studies, Vol. 20, No. 1. 2001. http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aph&AN=4472166&site=ehost-live
  7. 1 2 O’Connor, Vic. “A Criticism of Adelaide’s ‘Angry Penguins.’” The Communist Review. August 1944. https://www.marxists.org/history/australia/comintern/sections/australia/1944/adelaide.htm
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.