Static films and moving pictures: montage in avant-garde photography and film
Abstract
Photomontage has more to do with film than with any other art form - they have in
common the technique of montage. (Sergei Tretyakov)
By considering that photomontage and film use the technique of cutting and gluing
as dominant artistic device, and that montage, a technique unifying art and
technology for the first time, emerged as a dominant artistic feature of the avantgarde,
this thesis will explore the ideological and perceptual implications of its
advent in avant-garde art and film. The technological advances of the beginning of
the twentieth century, and particularly the advent of photography, allowed avantgarde
artists to break free from traditional concepts of artistic production – they
dispensed with the old criteria of uniqueness, originality, handicraft and personal
style. At a time when many avant-garde artists abruptly ceased to paint,
photomontage emerged as the privileged locus for a caesura with traditional art
forms. Photomontage envisioned film aesthetics insofar as it combines and
juxtaposes images of various perspectival planes and angles (Raoul Hausmann
described his early photomontages as “motionless moving pictures”). A
corresponding observation can be made on the use of montage in cinema, a
technique which crucially underpins the illusion of movement created through the
succession of photographic stills. The present thesis will investigate photomontage
and film in order to examine the effect technological reproduction played in
revolutionising artistic production, perception and ideology – where the technique
and philosophy of montage was key.