| FOREWORD
The following essay should be read in conjunction with viewing
the World War II art of Harold A. Laynor on display in this
museum.
The essay
endeavors to put a special group of American fighting men,
the little known "Ghost Army of World War II," into
historical perspective. Harold Laynor was one of those troops.
He realized as a pre teen that he wanted to be an artist,
and he took to its study by his high school years. He graduated
from the Parsons School of Design in New York City and was
awarded a year of art study in Paris. But WWII interrupted
his plans and in 1942 he enlisted in the United States Army.
He was twenty. He did not get to Paris that year, but he did
get to France right after D Day and served on or near the
front lines until Germany fell in May, 1945. The Ghost Army
is not only little known, it is also unique in the history
of American warfare in that it was a battlefront battalion
composed largely of artists, sculptors, architects, literary
figures and others from the arts and humanities. Many of the
new recruits were already famous; others would win celebrity
stripes after the war. They included Olin Dows, a prominent
artist and personal friend of President Franklin D. Roosevelt;
Bill Blass, a fashion designer of worldwide acclaim; Elsworth
Kelly, whose paintings hang in the Museum of Modern Art and
the Metropolitan; George Diestel, a Hollywood set designer;
Art Kane, a fashion photographer; and Harold A. Laynor, whose
works show in galleries all around the country, including
the Museum of Modern Art, and whose many distinctions include
the prestigious Louis Comfort Tiffany Award.
The special
makeup of the group was a deliberate effort to concentrate
bright people together so they could feed off each other's
imaginations and come up with new and better ways to deceive
the enemy. Deception was their way of life. Pretending they
were someone else was always their foremost activity. Sometimes
this required individuals to play particular roles, but usually
the unit passed itself off as some other outfit. Customarily
this called for front-line presence, so they were as battle
scarred as the troops they impersonated. Their special "artistic"
makeup, and their front-line experience, combined to make
their battalion the most unusual "deception" unit
in military history to that time. The story of the Ghost Army
remained under the cloak of government secrecy until about
two decades ago. Watergate so alarmed Americans that the Freedom
of Information Act, of little effect until then, was greatly
strengthened and allowed determined parties to search records
previously guarded against prying eyes. Engrossing tales about
wartime activities slowly began to emerge from the vast storehouses
of government records.
Still,
almost nothing has been written about the Ghost Army. The
Smithsonian of April, 1985, carried an article by Edward Parks,
"A phantom division played a role in Germany's defeat,"
but it just hints at the full scope of the unit's history.
That story remains buried in government depositories. Unfortunately,
some of Laynor's personal war records have been lost, so his
paintings must give sole testimony to his own experiences.
Hopefully, some young scholars will take up this search and
interview the Ghost Army's rapidly depleting rank of survivors.
The unprecedented role of the Ghost Army joined in a deliberate
fashion two age-old phenomena, artists in warfare and deception
in warfare. A thorough search in English-language literature
reveals that these topics have not been blended together in
monographic studies. There just is no corpus of works dealing
with the topic. That leaves only primary materials and incidental
passages in secondary works. Fortunately, the Arizona State
University Hayden Library has enough of those vital records
to support the story told in the following essay.
This exhibit
offers an opportunity to explore many aspects of war and culture.
There is art itself, of course, and Laynor's sketches, watercolors,
oils and acrylics portray the messy and gritty little details
of army life. They reveal to viewers the range of feelings
experienced by soldiers, from bravery to fear, from joy to
despair, from energy to exhaustion, etc.
Viewers
will see a wide variety in his style. Was that an aspect of
the uncertainties of life in the "trenches?" His
work is sometimes reminiscent of Bill Mauldin's "Willie
and Joe," and at other times impressionistic and abstract.
But keep in mind the artist's work is only the first step
in the process of art; the viewer's reaction is the equally
important concluding step. An observer, of course, will judge
the artist's technical competence. That being acceptable,
the viewer should endeavor to get into the artist's mind,
and applying one's own subjective feelings to the "art"
of viewing can only do that. The viewer's aesthetic experience
is highly personal, and emotional as well as intellectual.
Once made with a work of art, and then, voila, "a shock
of recognition" occurs. So, art, by definition is interactive.
Participate! The whole endeavor ought to be pleasurable as
well as informative. This essay is in an early stage. It will
grow as I am able to examine more intimate sources. I hope
it may be profitably read in its present form before, during
or after viewing the exhibit. A field quite so virgin has
no orthodoxy, no clearly marked paths, so be your own guide
as you travel through this dimly lit domain of artists and
deception and warfare. Historians are like fireflies. We carry
our illumination devices on our rear ends, so we see better
in retrospect than in prospect. We may not know where we're
going, but we think we know something about where we've been.
Let me test that notion by looking back into history and see
if I can shine some retrospective light for you in the following
essay on the strange odyssey of the Ghost Army.
William
W. Phillips
Pinetop, Arizona
May 20, 1996
THE GHOST
ARMY OF WORLD WAR II
Warfare and art inflame human passions. They combined in World
War II to produce one of history's most unusual combat units,
the 23rd Headquarters Special Troops, known quite privately
by its members as "The Ghost Army."
Historical
understanding always requires perspective, so, to get The
Ghost Army in focus, it is necessary to examine how warfare,
art and deception have intertwined in the past. The past is
always prologue, and must be carefully studied before subsequent
events can be understood. Warfare is almost as old as man
himself, far older than history. There are fifteen thousand-year
old archaeological relics such as walled communities and busted
skulls that clearly indicate war was waged that long ago.
Cave art depicting war may be up to thirty-five thousand years
old. That still leaves no record for the million or so years
that man has been cavorting around with his present physiological
makeup. Some variety of war probably took place during most
of that period.
Warfare
has shaped the broad outlines of history. Empires were founded
on conquest: Sumeria, Macedonia, Rome, Charlemagne, Great
Britain, Napoleon, etc. National borders have depended more
upon war than upon nationality; look at the mess in old Yugoslavia.
War established American independence and ended slavery in
the United States. Hitler tried to establish a thousand year
Reich by military might, and the Soviets threatened nuclear
disaster in their drive to communize the world. Most present
day values held dear by civilization were established or preserved
by combat. The liberties that Americans presently treasure
were saved by victory in WWII. Wars, in fact, have defined
most nations and peoples.
Sumerians
developed writing about 3100 BC; with it came the beginning
of record keeping and of formal history. From that time to
the present warfare has been a constant. Throughout history,
man has judged that war's benefits outweighed its cost, so
almost every generation everywhere that civilization took
root has experienced the death and destruction of war. Every
argument that war is evil has been countered with positive
claims. History has honored war's participants and their goals.
There are museums all over the world dedicated to wars and
weapons. War memorials and cemeteries have become sacred ground.
Religions throughout time have exalted sacrifice, an idea
that was easily blended into rationalizations for killing
and dying in combat. Indeed, falling in battle guaranteed
salvation in many religious systems.
Artists
have portrayed warriors as honorable and dignified, as the
best that the human race produces. Sargon II's siege of Khorsabal
(about 720 BC) is heroically depicted in statuary, and rock
carvings from 400 BC in Asia Minor show massed infantry in
gallant pose. Ancient vases and sarcophagi are emblazoned
with battle scenes. Mosaics, tapestries, illustrated manuscripts
and oils carrying pictures of men in war came in medieval
times. The artists who produced these works were generally
engaged and treated munificently by rulers or wealthy patrons.
Alexander The Great, for example, bestowed abundant favors
upon artists who honored his splendid military conquests.
The works of these "commissioned" artists have been
largely commemorative, but sometimes the "accidental"
artist, without commission, has almost touched infinity in
reaching for the human soul. See, for example, Goya's Disasters
of War and Picasso's Guernica. One "feels" as well
as "sees" such work. Viewers of Laynor's WWII art
should endeavor both to feel and see his works.
What made
war seem worthwhile these past five thousand years? Motives
have been varied, but the ones that repeat over and over are:
empire building, devotion to ideas and leaders, spoils, and
notions of superiority. Generally, as societies have grown
in numbers and knowledge, the weapons of war have become more
deadly, and this, too, has its devastation.
This in
turn sponsored anti-war feelings, which many in this century
embrace deeply. But these are rather recent developments;
"peace" movements did not really get a firm hold
until Hugo Grotius, a Dutch humanist of the early seventeenth
century, published his famous treatise, On the Law of War
and Peace. Unfortunately, peace became something that was
pursued ardently only during peacetime; during wartime it
became the future condition that the victors would fasten
upon the vanquished. Thus far its advocates have shown no
revolutionary results. WWII brought death to about fifty million
people; approximately the same number have died in war since
1945. Do these figures speak of any real progress towards
lasting peace? Maybe so, at least the major powers have restrained
themselves in the last fifty years. And, unlike the League
of Nations, the United Nations has survived all challenges
to date. Could it be that General William Tecumseh Sherman's
words near the end of his life are taking ho1d?
"I am tired and sick of war, its glory is all, moonshine
. . . war is hell."
Look carefully again at Laynor's works. Are they more suggestive
of hell, or of glory? Do they make a statement for war, or
for peace?
Beyond
the fact of war itself is the matter of how certain aspects
of it are prosecuted. These must be surveyed to establish
the Ghost Army's place in history.
From time
immemorial, warriors have endeavored to deceive each other.
At first the deception consisted of innovative strategic and
tactical maneuvers that were designed to outwit and overwhelm
foes. Hannibal's crossing the Alps and then duping Rome's
legions with brilliant maneuvers both stand as some of history's
foremost military deceptions. Of equal rank is the pretended
retreat of the Norman cavalry during the Battle of Hastings.
Ancients used plaster dummies, the Chinese even articulated
them, to deceive or frighten enemies. Infiltration of fortresses
(Designed by architects, the invisible war artists!) almost
became an art form as it called forth the most imaginative
deceptions. Every school child knows about the Trojan Horse,
but scores of other devices were also employed to "sneak"
into fortified places, or to employ new ways of attack from
without. Imagine the terror when defenders first faced siege
towers and weapons that propelled huge rocks.
As the
centuries passed, ever more inventive means of trickery were
devised. The Indians of North America refined their clever
guerrilla strategies with real and fake smoke signals, and
radio provided the same opportunity in the wars of this century.
Generally, every technological advance brought with it new
ways to deceive enemies.
The notion
of spying is one of the oldest deceptions. Spies have been
used it seems forever. During the American Civil War some
of the most effective spies were actors who had permits to
pass between North and South as traveling companies went on
national tour. Making war in general, and spying in particular,
has largely been the domain of men. However, throughout history,
some of the most successful and notorious spies have been
women. Too, starting primarily in the nineteenth century,
women begin to appear in small numbers as war artists, usually
away from the field of battle.
Use of
secret codes has been around as long as spying. Artists were
sometimes the devisers of codes or other secret ways to convey
messages. Spies, of course, also tried to bust codes. Just
as finding out the enemy's secrets was important, so was providing
false information to the enemy. This was done in thousands
of ways, many of which involved artists, such as posters falsely
indicating that a particular unit was off on a three-day pass,
or one welcoming a non-existent unit, etc. This sort of manipulation
of reality is called "disinformation." Benjamin
Franklin used it in the Revolutionary War when he planted
a phony news item that was aimed at American loyalists, telling
about how Indians, under direction from the British, scalped
fetuses they pulled from the wombs of American women. Whole
cloth! As noted earlier, war has been accepted through the
centuries because people have embraced the idea that its benefits
outweigh its costs. In part this is true because many desirable
social conditions are undeniably the result of war, such as
American independence. It is true, too, that war brings people
together in a more profound way than almost any other human
activity, allowing, nay, demanding them to express a "oneness,"
an "us against them" mentality that serves to define
who they are and what they stand for.
War has
been accepted, too, because it has been expertly popularized
and glorified. Its victors have been honored as heroes. Kings
and commanders from ancient times, well pleased with their
own worthiness, commissioned artists to do gallant paintings
and statues. These were almost always executed after the war,
and showed their subjects in courageous and magnificent poses.
Breasts were bedecked with medals, and reproduced in art.
Great cities around the world are display cases for statues
of men in war. Mounted generals seem to be an American favorite.
Museums house the work of unnumbered artists who have depicted
war scenes. The blend is sort of elevated to the higher reaches
of the mind when authors write of the "art" of war,
and there are hundreds of books that play upon that title,
commencing notably and suitably with The Art of War by Sun
Tzu, a fourth century BC philosopher.
Kings
and commanders quickly went beyond using artists just in a
romantic manner after the battle and came to realize that
artists also could play a role during the battle. With paintings
and posters they could build esprit de corps and spread propaganda.
Attached to combat units they could raise morale, help elevate
the fighting spirit.
By the
19th century this modern role was universally recognized.
And then a new dimension was created when the Englishman,
Roger Fenton, began the documentary tradition with his startling
photographs of the Crimean War. Soon thereafter, Matthew Brady
and others produced thousands of remarkable photographs of
the American Civil War. A new field of art was born out of
the crucible of war. For the first time, people back home
were presented current depictions of war. Previously, the
artists' renditions, after the fact, tended to be romantic
and show the glorious and heroic aspects of warfare. Look
over the art of war before the last century and one will not
find much gore or suffering; instead, one finds the stuff
that makes young hearts beat patriotically and long for the
opportunity to shine in battle. Realism comes with modern
warfare, though, and artists generally, not only photographers,
now depict gore as much as romance.
Independent
America's first century of warfare also provided an inviting
series of venues for the graphic arts. This field had first
blossomed in America with Benjamin Franklin's innovative use
of woodcut engravings to illustrate news stories. It prospered
later with the invention of lithography and telegraphy and
the development and installation of first-rank, continuous-feed
printing presses.
According
to Clarence P. Hornung and Fridolf Johnson, the authors of
200 Years of American Graphic Art, the graphic arts in America
"have alternately reached high levels of excellence and
descended to deep troughs of tastelessness." During those
periods of distinction, the graphics were exuberant and optimistic,
portraying America as the finest product of human endeavor.
Handbills and broadsides drummed up opposition to the British
on the eve of the Revolutionary War, and Paul Revere's copper
engraving of the Boston Massacre was the most famous print
of the whole era. During the War of 1812, when many Americans
did not have strong "us-against-them" feelings,
poster art attained one of its highs and helped hold enough
Americans together to frustrate Great Britain's design to
reclaim its colonies and change the Atlantic Ocean back into
King George's Lake. But the art then descended into a trough,
only to reemerge during the Civil War with some of its finest
work ever. Harper's Weekly led the way with front-page woodcuts
glorifying the Union cause. These had the happy, unanticipated
effect of driving advertising off the front and cover pages
of newspapers and magazines. Thomas Nast emerged at this time
as America's foremost cartoonist, and young Winslow Homer
became "America's Artist" with his glorious array
of sensitive sketches, woodcuts and oils.
Warfare
reaches into the most secret places of the human mind, places
where pride reigns, where emotion is paramount, where instinct
dwells. These are the same places that art reaches, so it
was only to be expected that warfare and art would blend harmoniously.
Sun Tzu held that war and life are guided by the same laws
and principles; the "stuff" of war and life are
the same, he affirmed. The notion has been reaffirmed frequently
through the centuries since, with von Clausewitz in the early
eighteen hundreds making perhaps its most acclaimed modern
formulation. Those who deal with art and war treat them not
as isolated happenings, but as aspects of man's total universe.
They simultaneously occupy the same ground. Because of this
historic commingling, it is difficult to understand how survey
accounts in both fields have almost completely ignored the
other. Through the centuries artists have depicted war scenes;
but historians of art rarely mention war. The reverse is equally
true, as one must search carefully through histories of war
for any recognition of art, even in those works that are richly
illustrated with paintings and photographs.
One of
the places art and warfare meet is in that part of the mind
where myths reside. War has always given rise to myths. For
example: that Cossacks were born to freedom; that Indians
were savages, later revised to noble savages; that God favored
conquerors; that the crusades were commissioned by God; that
the American "boy" was the world's finest soldier;
etc. All of these, and uncounted other myths born of war,
have been immortalized by artists.
Continue
> >
|
|