SCISSOR WRITING
”Det hele er Andersens poesi
i klipperi! Broget, løjerligt alleslags, alt med en saks!” (In Andersen's paper-cuts you see
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This was Hans Christian Andersen’s own explanation of a highly spectacular page in Astrid Stampes Billedbog from 1853, where seven or eight little cuttings from twice as many pieces of paper in all sorts of colours and patterns merge into one big picture. And this is also how we must regard Andersen’s paper art: as something colourful, diverting and poetic that is extremely closely linked to his lyric poetry, drama, fairy-tales, novels and travel books. Andersen’s paper-cuts cannot just be separated from his written oeuvre and placed beside it.
Andersen had an urge to “cut and paste” that was just as strong as the urge to write and travel. He was nearly always armed with a pair of scissors, which could be quite dangerous. They could slip out of his pocket, and he might sit on them, which was what happened when he was on his way across the island of Funen in a horse-drawn carriage, with the result that he had to have his painful backside bathed and bandaged. But most of the time he grasped his scissors with pleasure, and when he folded the paper once or twice and started cutting from a longitudinal or transverse axis, it was always in some way a visualization of the way his magical wordplay emerged from nothing, and swiftly materialized itself in patterns, figures and landscapes. A paper-cut would often be a little fairy-tale in itself in time and space, folded in and out in various dimensions, and with a keen sense of the possible effects of depth and contrast.
This is the way many children in the bourgeois homes of Copenhagen, in various Danish manor houses and in the palaces of royal families and princes in Europe, as well as the children of good friends such as the painter Wilhelm Kaulbach in Munich, the poets Elizabeth Barret and Robert Browning in Rome, and Charles Dickens in London experienced Hans Christian Andersen with his scissors and paper-cuts in the nineteenth century: as a writer who was permeated with creativity and fairy-tales, who just by tapping his lofty brow, or raising his pen and scissors, could bring the dead surfaces of the paper to life. When Andersen began to turn the coloured pieces of paper around the steady tips of his scissors, none of the children around the table knew what was going to happen. He liked to start by talking a little, and in doing so would incorporate an improvised fairy-tale relating to the theme or subjects of the paper-cut. Frequently he would stop in order to add a new longitudinal or transverse axis on the paper so as to break the symmetry and provoke new angles and perspectives. These corresponded to the devices he would employ as a storyteller, whether orally or in writing, when he started “editing” – in a filmic sense – the chronology, or suddenly reshuffled the composition in order to introduce new angles, scenes and persons.
There was also a form of toy production involved in Andersen’s paper-cuts. These could be more or less interactive decorations for the nursery in the form of amusing, movable figures, or the clumsier but charming “mill-men” (Portman, Cat. 481 + Portman, Cat. 491) which always had an inviting ladder leading up to a large door with wicket-gates in the mill-man’s stomach, which could therefore be opened and closed and looked into or out of. With his four flailing arms, the mill-man could either be stood on a table or hung up in a window and – if it was a particularly splendid and bronzed mill-man – on a Christmas tree. Among the toys Andersen cut out of paper are theatre tableaux, complete stages including curtain, orchestra pit, wing flats and dancers (Portman, Cat. 477), or fantastic, Oriental palaces with narrow spires, windows and doors that could be opened and closed so as to allow fantasy to enter and be left in peace for quite a while (Laage-Petersen, No. 657). In a few rarer cases there were really large, ambitious layout projects for the nursery similar to the cut and pasted paper castle which Andersen describes in his little known fairy-tale “Herrebladene” (“The Court Cards”), which was not printed and published until three decades after his death and has never been included in his collected works. |
What pretty things can be made by cutting and pasting paper! Well might one say this after seeing the paper castle that had been cut out and pasted together so as to fill a whole table and painted to look as if it had been built of red bricks; it had a shining copper roof, towers and a drawbridge; water in the canals like a mirror – because it was a mirror. In the highest tower stood a sentry made of wood; he had a trumpet he could blow, but he didn’t blow it. |
The fairy-tale is about a boy called William, who owns this marvellous paper castle and loves to go down on his hands and knees or flop in a chair and look in through the gates to the banqueting hall, where the walls are decorated with kings and queens and jacks from a set of playing cards. One evening, when William is gazing at the splendid playing cards, they become very much alive. They raise their sceptres, fans and halberds and greet the lord of the manor, William, who has now come so close that he almost bumps his head into the paper castle and therefore has to be held back by the jacks of clubs, spades, diamonds and hearts, who warn him not to come too close. The jack of hearts is even impudent enough to mention that the little lord of the manor probably hasn’t washed his hands today.
The four jacks now take turns to tell the boy that all the playing cards were once living people who had failed to behave the way they should have done, and William is given a lot of examples. At the same time, after each story, he is asked to light a candle for each and every one of the playing cards. Candles, paper and a child! A catastrophe is lurking as the jacks prattle away, and William, with sparkling eyes – over-excited by all these wonderful visions – lights one candle after another all round the paper castle. What happens is inevitable: suddenly William jumps away in fright and calls his father and mother to help him at once, because the paper castle and all the court cards have gone up in flames: |
Well, that was the end of William’s castle and the court cards. William is still alive and washes his hands. It wasn’t his fault that the castle burned down. |
No, it was more likely due to Andersen’s glowing imagination. His story about the court cards is among the radically deep insights into the nursery, children’s behaviour and psychology, something which was completely new in the 1830s and 1840s. Hitherto, nobody else had ever spoken to children so consistently on their own level; the sum of imagination and conceptual power in a confrontation between children and the child in Andersen’s own mind was often so intense that there was a risk of setting fire to the paper.
The fact that Andersen could create such delicate patterns and gossamery, graceful dancers out of a thickly folded piece of paper with the help of a crude, heavy pair of scissors was pure magic in the eyes of children. The eldest of the daughters at Holsteinsborg Manor remembered in particular, later in life as a grown-up baroness, the light, delicate dolls Andersen had cut for her out of white paper and which she afterwards had placed on the table and blown at carefully so that they fluttered back and forth: “He always cut with an enormous pair of paper scissors, and I simply couldn’t understand how he could cut such pretty, delicate things with his big hands and this enormous pair of scissors.” Unlike many of the silhouette and paper cutters of the period, Andersen never began with a pencil sketch of his subject. Instead, he cut from an inner horizon – improvised – as we can see from the two very beautiful and romantic bouquet holders from the Laage-Petersen Collection (Laage-Petersen, No. 658 + Laage-Petersen, No. 656) which were designed to wrap round the rather unorthodox – if not to say “post-modern” – flower bouquets which he made with the flowers he found in manor house gardens and growing wild in ditches, dunes and on the moors. With his sense of colour, ability to think three-dimensionally and pictorial talents, he was able to embark on very large and often quite complicated paper-cuts that demanded both time and concentration. Quite splendid is the big paper-cut for the Melchior family, which now hangs on a wall in the Andersen House in Odense. It combines most of the figures, symbols, subjects and themes in Andersen’s paper art, and at the same time includes a number of small puzzle pictures of the kind that have a form or figure concealed within the main lines of the paper-cut. Something of the same kind often takes place in Andersen’s fairy-tales and stories, which may well have several layers of meaning and thus expose themselves to two, three or four possible interpretations. Andersen often exploited the possibility for a puzzle or silhouette effect in his paper art with great elegance. See, for example, the relatively simple paper-cut “Dancers under Trees” in the Laage-Petersen Collection (Laage-Petersen, No. 656), where two young sylphs, beneath old, threatening treetops that are hardly distinguishable from evil stepmothers or grumpy witches, form a puzzle picture whose black base could be both an oriental palace and a Chinese temple, or a ship bound for other worlds into which the young girls, together with the beholder of the paper-cut, dance and dream themselves: “Come on! This way!” In his collages in the large, well-organized picture-books for children in families which Andersen frequently visited, his artistic form of expression was extremely modern. They often included such varied and ephemeral material as cut-out fragments of periodicals, train tickets, bills, advertisements, wine-bottle labels, stamps, maps and the like, which were then coloured or given another layer of material, for example colourful fragments, such as surplus from a paper-cut or a very short poem, written in flowing ink that gathered the scattered parts of the collage together in short, rhyming lines of verse such as “En linedans / under træernes krans. / Manden nederst, han hedder Frands!” (“Tightrope-walking / beneath the treetops / Below is the man, his name is Franz!”) and “Guld på tværs, / indeni et vers, / det er komers.” (“Gold across, / a verse inside, / that’s fun.” [?] It certainly was! In many places in Andersen’s hundreds of collages we find an expressionistic idiom that points directly towards the collage art of dadaism and surrealism in the 1920s.
On the one hand, these standing, sitting and balancing figures (for instance Laage-Petersen, No. 657 + Laage-Petersen, No. 658) are pendants to the colourful and widely ramified gallery of characters in Andersen’s 156 fairy-tales. On the other hand they are often so grotesque and primitive (Hans Christian Ørsted's Picture-Book, fol. 4 verso) that in many cases they resemble mythical or cultic figures known to us from heathen times, from the Inuit culture in the polar regions as well as ancient tribes in the heart of Africa and outer Polynesia, where orally narrated and sculpturally formed art has always been associated with a mythological attitude to life. Andersen’s own father, who knew how to use a pair of scissors and a needle, had been quite a clever paper-cutter, and it was he who taught the sensitive, feminine boy how to handle a pair of scissors and how to cut in many different kinds of materials. In his youth, the cobbler in Munkemølle-stræde had been good at composing so-called “pledge-letters”. A letter of this kind obliged the receiver to guess the identity of the sender – an early form of valentine – and always involved a touch of roguish eroticism. And he could also cut and paste pictures and arrange them in the funniest ways, as Andersen relates in The Story of My Life, so that they could be transformed, as if by magic, just by pulling a string. He had also built a little theatre in a box with a peephole through which his son – who was crazy about the theatre – could see a series of little nodding puppets.
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(From Andersen's scissors
”Fra H.C. Andersens saks
sprang et eventyr straks
Du klipningen fik,
Du er den milde kritik!”
A fairy-tale sprang forth.
You were given the paper-cut;
You are the kindly critic!)
Bibliography: H.C. Andersen: "Herrebladene", in Erik Dal (red.): H.C. Andersens eventyr, Vol. V. Copenhagen 1967, pp. 247-250
Jens Andersen (b. 1955), Ph.D. in Scandinavian literature. Literary critic at the Copenhagen daily Berlingske Tidende. Has written biographies and books about Thit Jensen (1990), Tom Kristensen (1993), Tove Ditlevsen (1997) and Aksel Sandemose (1998). Has also collaborated with the illustrator Flemming B.Jeppesen on a book entitled H.C. Andersens glemte eventyr (H.C.Andersen’s forgotten fairy-tales) (2000), a series of retellings of Andersen’s lesser known fairy-tales. Jens Andersen’s new biography of Hans Christian Andersen will be published in the autumn of 2003.
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© Det Kongelige Bibliotek 2002