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''aCOMMENT'' was an early Australian modernist
avant-garde In the arts and literature, the term ''avant-garde'' ( meaning or ) identifies an experimental genre or work of art, and the artist who created it, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable ...
literary "little magazine" of the 1940s published in
Melbourne Melbourne ( , ; Boonwurrung language, Boonwurrung/ or ) is the List of Australian capital cities, capital and List of cities in Australia by population, most populous city of the States and territories of Australia, Australian state of Victori ...
by
Cecily Crozier Cecily Medland Crozier (21 July 1911, Elsternwick – 2006, Adelaide) was an artist, poet and literary editor who co-founded ''aCOMMENT'', an avant-garde literary magazine in Melbourne. Biography Crozier was born in Elsternwick, on 21 July 19 ...
. It ran to twenty-six, mostly quarterly, issues from 1940 to 1947.


History

Cecily Crozier, recently returned with her mother to Australia at the commencement of WW2, noted in 1940 that Melbourne had no avant-garde literary magazine. Despite wartime being inopportune for the launch of such a venture she, with her cousins Sylvia, Eila and Irvine Heber Green (1913–1997) in September that year published ''Comment,'' sometimes subtitled "A Journal of Poetry, Art, Literature and Social Comment" and soon retitled ''aCOMMENT''; the title set thus on each cover, with a small lower-case 'a' embedded within, most frequently, the all-capitals word 'COMMENT'. It appeared one month before its better known contemporary, ''
Angry Penguins ''Angry Penguins'' was an art and literary magazine established in 1940 by surrealist poet Max Harris. Originally based in Adelaide, the magazine moved to Melbourne in 1942 once Harris joined the Heide Circle, a group of modernist painters and w ...
'', with which it shared many of its contributors, and which it outlived by a year. The mainstream press was slow to report its existence. In October 1941 Perth's '' Daily News'' cast the first stones, especially at its design, the reviewer having received a
"gift of some copies of a queer (to me) little publication, 'a comment,' produced in Melbourne. It is a manifestation of the revolt of some young persons against the order of things accepted by the great majority, as surrealism is in the field of pictorial art. Making a bold bid for freedom 'a comment' will have no truck with capital letters, and the arch rebels among its contributors scorn punctuation."
''
The Sydney Morning Herald ''The Sydney Morning Herald'' (''SMH'') is a daily Tabloid (newspaper format), tabloid newspaper published in Sydney, Australia, and owned by Nine Entertainment. Founded in 1831 as the ''Sydney Herald'', the ''Herald'' is the oldest continuous ...
'' rated it "the most suavely produced – on brown paper with Cairo type – ..sophisticated man-about-town (and lately somewhat in need of cash) of the literary journals," while ''
The Age ''The Age'' is a daily newspaper in Melbourne, Australia, that has been published since 1854. Owned and published by Nine Entertainment, ''The Age'' primarily serves Victoria (Australia), Victoria, but copies also sell in Tasmania, the Austral ...
''newspaper article about the January 1945 issue was headed "High-brows Only";
"Readers of modern literature, of the experimental kind, may like to know about ''A Comment''...It is an attractive little magazine, if you like this sort of thing...A comment on Angry Adelaide with a plea for freedom of expression, a fine poem by Alec King, and one or two indifferent lino cuts make up the staple of this number. For those interested, it is well worth the price. Those who like the orthodox are urged to stick to their accustomed periodical literature."
The Sydney ''Jewish News'' columnist George M. Berger, having himself contributed to the magazine, noted that "among...the magazine’s principal contributors, are at least two Jews, Max Harris and Karl Shapiro," and was less equivocal in praise;
"Since the publication of “Art in Australia” had to cease because of paper-shortage, ''A Comment'', has become the only Australian periodical of progressive literary design. It is aptly illustrated by linocuts and photo-studies by contemporary artists such as Menkhorst and Irvine Green. Its publisher can be congratulated upon the magazine’s value as a mouth piece and forum of progressive endeavour, and should be encouraged by greater publicity for her efforts."G. M. Berger, "Modern Poetry," ''The Sydney Jewish News,'' Friday 4 Jun 1943 p.7
In his memoir of the period, contributor to the magazine Alister Kershaw remarks on;
"...the dispiriting atmosphere prevailing when Cecily Crozier took it into her head to launch her ''Comment''. She must have been raving mad. I've been delicately hinting that there was never a good moment at which to start a highbrow magazine but Cecily chose the very worst...in wartime it seems to be generally agreed that there's something unpatriotic, something downright subversive, about any cultural activity other than painting portraits of generals or writing dispatches as a war correspondent. To her credit, Cecily didn't give a hoot for whatever tut-tutting disapproval she may have encountered but she must have felt tempted on occasion to call the whole harebrained enterprise off when she came up against the material difficulties involved. For another wartime phenomenon is that, within minutes of hostilities breaking out, everything, from bootlaces to wheelbarrows, and everybody, from circus acrobats to monumental masons, virtually disappear overnight. When ''Comment'' came in to existence there was a shortage a of printers and a shortage of type, a shortage of staples, a shortage, for all I know, of ink. And, first and foremost, there was a shortage of paper."
Victoria Perin notes that Crozier was among a number of women during WW2 who valiantly nurtured and maintained the still nascent modernist art and culture of Australia.


Format and distribution

The magazine's editing was carried out at Crozier's home at 42 Bourke Road, Oakleigh. Due to the wartime shortages the magazine was printed on 23 cm brown wrapping paper by Bradley Printers of 40 Glenferrie Road, Malvern, and set in the Cairo typeface. Issues of 8–30 pages appeared irregularly; nominally quarterly, apart from a double number 9 & 10 (Jan. 1942) titled ''A new year comment''. The cover price was sixpence (1940–1942); one shilling (1943); rising to one shilling and sixpence (1944–1947). It was available by subscription; in one editorial Crozier boasts 300 subscribers. It also sold in Sydney, where artists
Carl Plate Carl Olaf Plate (19 December 1909 – 15 May 1977) was a prominent Australian modernist painter and collage artist. Biography Born in Perth, Western Australia, Plate was the son of German born artist and writer Adolph Gustav Plate and the youn ...
and
James Gleeson James Timothy Gleeson (21 November 1915 – 20 October 2008) was an Australian artist. He served on the board of the National Gallery of Australia. Early life Gleeson was born in the Hornsby in 1915 and attended East Sydney Technical Colleg ...
distributed it, and in Melbourne at
Gino Nibbi Gino Nibbi (1896–1969) was an Italian-born naturalised Australian author, art critic, gallerist, intellectual, and bookseller in Australia and Italy, who helped educate and connect Melbourne modernist artists and their public. Early life Nibb ...
's ''Leonardo Art Shop'', 166 Little Collins Street, near the “Paris End” of Collins Street, an outlet for international magazines such as ''
Minotaure ''Minotaure'' was a Surrealism, Surrealist-oriented magazine founded by Albert Skira and Tériade, E. Tériade in Paris and published in French between 1933 and 1939. ''Minotaure'' published on the plastic arts, poetry and literature, the avant g ...
'' and '' transition'', and during the 1930s and 40s inspired a Melbourne avant-garde. The covers, mostly linocuts by William Constable, Robert Miller, Irvine Green, Decima McColl,
Eric Thake Eric Prentice Anchor Thake (8 June 1904 – 3 November 1982) was an Australian artist, designer, painter, printmaker and war artist. His 1972 Christmas card ''An Opera House in Every Home,'' a humorous take on Jørn Utzon's World Heritage-liste ...
and others, austererly printed in only one or two colours, declared its
Modernist Modernism was an early 20th-century movement in literature, visual arts, and music that emphasized experimentation, abstraction, and Subjectivity and objectivity (philosophy), subjective experience. Philosophy, politics, architecture, and soc ...
ethos.


Content

''aCOMMENT'' promoted experimental, often surrealist, writing and art, publishing the work of some of Australia's most prominent modernists of the 1940s. The first number of ''Comment'' declared; "Our aim is stimulation...we will extract from the surrounding gloom a few people who will be really interested in our effort to put into print the newest ideas in writing and design." In issue four Crozier challenges her readers: “Why not let ''Comment'' be the battle ground upon which YOU will fight for your ideals and ideas.” The last issue, Winter 1947 featured Max Harris, Irvine Green, and Karl Shapiro; there is a two-page review of Shapiro's ''The Place of Love'' by Harris; Louis Thomas Dimes' three-page article under the pseudonym 'l'homme qui rit'; Joseph O'Dwyer; and
Parker Tyler Harrison Parker Tyler (March 6, 1904 – July 24, 1974), was an American author, poet, and film critic. Career Tyler co-authored ''The Young and Evil'', in 1933 with writer Charles Henri Ford. The work was one of the first openly gay America ...
. The poetry supplement contains works by
James Gleeson James Timothy Gleeson (21 November 1915 – 20 October 2008) was an Australian artist. He served on the board of the National Gallery of Australia. Early life Gleeson was born in the Hornsby in 1915 and attended East Sydney Technical Colleg ...
('Orchestration'), Geoffrey Dutten ic
Joy Hester Joy St Clair Hester (21 August 1920 – 4 December 1960) was an Australian artist. She was a member of the Angry Penguins movement and the Heide Circle who played an integral role in the development of Australian Modernism. Hester is best known ...
, Shapiro and Dimes.


Contributors

Cecily Crozier was its editor (though Kershaw records that "at one point she furnished an editorial which specifically stated that there was no editor,") and also wrote for the magazine, while Irvine Green was its designer and illustrator, photographer and a contributing writer. Though he joined the
RAAF The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) is the principal aerial warfare force of Australia, a part of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) along with the Royal Australian Navy and the Australian Army. Constitutionally the governor-general of Aus ...
and was posted in
aerial reconnaissance Aerial reconnaissance is reconnaissance for a military or Strategy, strategic purpose that is conducted using reconnaissance aircraft. The role of reconnaissance can fulfil a variety of requirements including Artillery observer, artillery spott ...
he contributed
woodcut Woodcut is a relief printing technique in printmaking. An artist carves an image into the surface of a block of wood—typically with gouges—leaving the printing parts level with the surface while removing the non-printing parts. Areas that ...
s and
linocut Linocut, also known as lino print, lino printing or linoleum art, is a printmaking technique, a variant of relief printing in which a sheet of linoleum (sometimes mounted on a wooden block) is used for a relief printing, relief surface. A design i ...
s for most of the covers and his illustrations, and occasionally his tipped-in photographs, appear regularly in ''aCOMMENT'' until its demise after 26 issues in 1947. He and Crozier married in July 1941 but soon separated. *
James Gleeson James Timothy Gleeson (21 November 1915 – 20 October 2008) was an Australian artist. He served on the board of the National Gallery of Australia. Early life Gleeson was born in the Hornsby in 1915 and attended East Sydney Technical Colleg ...
* Alec King * Arthur Ashworth * Albert Tucker *
Michael Keon Michael Keon Sr. (19 October 1918 – 22 May 2006) was an Australian political journalist and author. His articles and books mainly focus on Asian politics and the military actions that surround the changes and transitions in political power. ...
* Muir Holburn * Max Harris * Adrian Lawlor * Alister Kershaw American contributors to the magazine were servicemen stationed in New Guinea during the war who took their recreation leave in Australia;
Karl Shapiro Karl Jay Shapiro (November 10, 1913 – May 14, 2000) was an American poet. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1945 for his collection ''V-Letter and Other Poems''. He was appointed the fifth Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to ...
, author of the autobiographical ''Younger Son''; Harry Roskolenko (''Baedecker of a Bachelor'' and ''The Terrorized),'' and also William Van O'Connor, who after the war, on a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, wrote ''Sense and Sensibility in Modern Poetry'' published in 1948. Shapiro enthused about the magazine; "A COMMENT should be shown in America. It is brave and good—as good as our best—and really a signpost in a world of destroyed art”


Demise

''aCOMMENT'' ran at a loss, with costs often met by Crozier and Green, until it was forced to fold after the Winter issue of 1947 in which Crozier wrote;
“Dear Readers, This will probably be the last ''Comment'' for a considerable time. The subscriptions I asked for some time ago have never materialised, as I’m afraid I hoped and expected. May l say once again that ''Comment'' has always been run on subscriptions, with the always large deficit made up from either Irvine Green’s pocket or my own...I need 150 subscriptions to bring ''Comment'' out four times a year. Believe me, my faithful readers, I have lived with ''Comment'' for seven years and the situation desolates me, but with so many little magazines the rocks of disaster always loom close.”
Writing in 1955 John Tregenza noted that "Of the thirty-seven little magazines published in Australia since 1923, only five succeeded in lasting for more than ten issues," and of aCOMMENT notes its success in that it "had managed to avoid the rocks for an exceptionally long time — for seven years and 25 icissues."


Legacy

Max Delany, director,
Monash University Museum of Art The Monash University Museum of Art (MUMA), formerly the Monash University Gallery, is a contemporary art museum on Monash University's Caulfield campus on Dandenong Road, Melbourne, Australia. History The Museum grew out of a number of ear ...
in an essay on art magazines writes that;
''Comment'' sought to express the feelings and sensuality of a new generation of artists and thinkers, and, in Max Harris’ words, to ‘be at one with the surrealists and revolutionaries in defeating a moral system and a moral society which expresses the victory of death ndthe corruption of desire…’.


References


External links


David Rainey: Comment Publications archives some content from ''aCOMMENT'' and summary of a late interview with Crozier
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''aCOMMENT'' Australian literature Literary magazines published in Australia 1940 establishments in Australia 1947 disestablishments in Australia Modernist writers Magazines established in 1940 Magazines disestablished in 1947 Defunct magazines published in Australia Magazines published in Melbourne Quarterly magazines published in Australia Avant-garde magazines