#title Remembering Arthur Koestler
#author Roy R. Behrens
#date 1998
#source <[[http://www.bobolinkbooks.com/BALLAST/ak.html][bobolinkbooks.com/BALLAST/ak.html]]>. An earlier, different version of this essay, titled “Encountering Koestler,” was published in PRINT magazine (New York). Vol. 52, No. 5, Sept-Oct 1998, pp. 38ff.
#lang en
#pubdate 2025-03-06T04:50:48
#topics
#notes [[https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzYrUfsAvkZur5cBv6xlhSg][@camoupedia9126]]
[[r-r-roy-r-behrens-remembering-arthur-koestler-1.jpg][Photograph of Arthur Koestler by Dimitri Kessel for Life (1949)]]
As an undergraduate art student in the 1960s,
I was required to read for Humanities class Arthur Koestler’s
Darkness at Noon, Albert Camus’
The Stranger, and Jean-Paul Sartre’s
No Exit. Many years later, I discovered that,
amusingly, all three of these literary titans had been extraordinarily
heavy drinking companions in postwar Paris, and that on one
unforgettable evening in 1949 a greatly intoxicated Koestler (who was
small and reputedly scrappy) had thrown a glass at Sartre and had given
Camus a black eye.
My favorite photograph of Koestler was made in the same year as that
famous brawl by Dmitri Kessel for Life
magazine. A double portrait of the Hungarian-born British writer and his
magnificent boxer Sabby, it is memorable in part because of the clever,
uncanny resemblance between dog and master—boxer meets boxer, they seem
deliberately to be imitating one another.
In addition, it is, as theorists sometimes say, a “self-exemplifying”
image because that portrait is a paradigmatic example of what Koestler
identified as the key ingredient throughout all creative activity: “The
discovery of hidden similarities” or (his neologism)
bisociation, which he defined as perceiving a
thing “in two self-consistent but incompatible frames of reference at
the same time.”
Born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary, in 1905, Koestler moved with his
family to Vienna at the end of World War I, where he attended the
University of Vienna in science and psychology. Of Jewish ethnicity, he
also became interested in Zionism. After living briefly in Palestine, he
worked as a science editor and foreign correspondent for European
newspapers. In 1931 in Berlin, he joined the Communist Party (it was, in
his words, “the only apparent alternative to Nazi rule”) and traveled to
the Soviet Union.
Imprisoned in 1937 for three months by the Fascists during the Spanish
Civil War, he narrowly escaped a death sentence. Meanwhile, he had grown
disenchanted with the Soviet Union, and in 1941, he became an outspoken
opponent of Communism with the publication of
Darkness at Noon, a chilling political novel
about the show trials and purges in Stalinist Russia.
When he gave up Communism, Koestler also abandoned political writing.
Returned to scientific subjects, he spent the second half of his life
writing innovative and often controversial books about the nature of
problem-solving, hierarchical structures, biological evolution, and
parapsychology.
In 1964, he published The Act of Creation, an
elaborate 750-page opus in which he presented a wide-ranging theory
about creativity in art, scientific discovery, and humor. “The
originality of genius, in art as in science,” wrote Koestler, “consists
of a shift of attention to aspects of reality previously ignored,
discovering hidden connections, seeing familiar objects or events in a
new light.”
I recognized Koestler’s name when I first saw a copy of
The Act of Creation in 1967. But I had no
idea that he had shifted from political fiction to scientific polemic.
While touring the US several years earlier, as I later learned, he had
visited the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor to witness the flatworm
learning experiments of psychologist James V. McConnell (who published
The Worm Runner’s Digest, on which I would
later work); had conferred with J.B. Rhine at Duke University about
extrasensory perception; and had taken an LSD trip with Timothy Leary at
Harvard.{1}
More than any other book, The Act of Creation
(subtitled A Study of the Conscious and Unconscious
in Science and Art) influenced my thinking and profoundly
changed the way I work as an artist, graphic designer, writer and
teacher. Simply, before reading it, I had entirely misunderstood the
nature of creativity. I had thought of it literally, in the sense of the
Old Testament, as a process by which one “creates” something new from
nothing. Young, and defiantly determined to be original and
“self-expressive,” I made an unwavering effort to avoid being
influenced by other students, teachers and professionals.
All this is absurdly self-evident now, but at age 19, as I read
Koestler’s book, I experienced a kind of epiphany in which I came to
realize that human beings never literally create; they never produce any
thing from nothing. Instead, all innovations—artworks, design solutions,
or scientific discoveries—come about from the reshuffling and
recombination of already existing components, by a process Albert
Einstein called “combinatory play.”
To follow, if I really hoped to become an effective designer, an
inspiring teacher, or an ingenious problem-solver, I should actively
seek influences, not avoid them. I should be open to and eager to learn
about the widest variety of subjects, and in particular I should be
interested in things that fall outside the realm of graphic design.
Indeed, the greater the number, disparity, and presumed initial
irrelevance of such influences, the more likely that they would
eventually make unexpected combinations.
Gradually, in part because of Koestler’s book, I stopped thinking of
human endeavor as rigidly sequestered in categories like art, language,
psychology, physics, and so on. I began to read and observe more
broadly, and to regard experience as a cross-section in which seemingly
incompatible fields could be linked by universal form principles, such
as rhyme, analogy, metaphor, montage, and metamorphosis. I also became
more appreciative of the value and significance of humor, the usefulness
of accidents and errors, and the contribution of unconscious ruminating
or incubation.
In 1971, as a graduate student at the Rhode Island School of Design, I
finished a book manuscript in which I talked about art and design in
relation to Koestler’s ideas. I mailed the manuscript to his London home
address, half expecting that he would return it unopened. To my
surprise, not only did he read it, he replied with a wonderfully
generous note, accompanied by a jacket blurb. Soon after, it was
accepted for publication (but never published, fortunately, because I
withdrew it, then published it later in a much improved, expanded form,
called Design in the Visual Arts). Since
then, a flood of comparable books have come out about the use of
bisociative wit in design, among the finest of which are Beryl McAlhone
and David Stuart’s A Smile in the Mind
(Phaidon, 1996), Alan Fletcher’s The Art of Looking
Sideways (Phaidon, 2001), and Michael Johnson’s
Problem Solved (Phaidon, 2002).
It was exhilarating to be encouraged by an author whose books I had once
been required to read. For more than ten years, I continued to write to
Koestler on occasion and to send him copies of my published essays. In
part from having read his books, I became interested in camouflage,
mimicry, and the coloration of animals. I became an amateur
lepidopterist, and along with one of my letters I sent him a mounted
butterfly, inscribed with its Latin scientific name. At the time, he was
an unrelenting opponent of behavioral psychology, the chief proponent of
which was Harvard psychologist B.F. Skinner.{2} In
appreciation of the butterfly I sent him, Koestler replied with a
humorous card that featured a reproduction of a tapestry of St. George
slaying the dragon. Below, beside a hand-drawn arrow pointing to the
dragon, he had written Drakon Skinneris.
[[r-r-roy-r-behrens-remembering-arthur-koestler-2.jpg][Roy R. Behrens, digital montage titled Nautilus Bridge (c2006).]]
My final letter to Koestler was in the summer of 1982, when I wrote to
tell him that Design in the Visual Arts
(Prentice-Hall, 1984), my reincarnated earlier work, would be dedicated
to him. He was seventy-seven. I hadn’t known that he was ill, that he
had been diagnosed with both Parkinson’s disease and leukemia. As his
condition worsened, it had become all but impossible for him to work.
His wife Cynthia, on the other hand, who was 22 years younger, was
apparently in good health. As members of a euthanasia group called Exit,
they were advocates of “the right to die with dignity.” Sadly, on March
1, 1983, in the living room of their London home, they committed suicide
together by taking an overdose of barbiturates.
On occasion, I still return to passages in The Act of
Creation, many of which are exquisitely worded and seem to be
stirring descriptions of what I myself experience when I design, write,
teach or whatever. As fresh as Koestler’s writing remains, it is hard to
believe that almost a half century has passed since that book was
initially published. Indeed, it came out in the same year as the Ford
Mustang, zip codes, The Warren Commission Report, my high school
graduation, and Elizabeth Taylor’s first marriage to Richard Burton.
Following his death, aspects of Koestler’s earlier life became
ignominious, to the extent that his work may forever be tarnished. But
even in advance of that, his writings had been controversial. In a
biography of Koestler, Ian Hamilton said of The Act
of Creation that it is “by any standard an astonishing work of
erudition, brilliance, originality, and daring to the point of
foolhardiness.”{3} Even with an admission of
foolhardiness, that endorsement of the book would probably still
objection among some critics, mostly scientists and academics, who
dismiss it, along with his subsequent work, as mere “clever journalism.”
[[r-r-roy-r-behrens-remembering-arthur-koestler-3.jpg][Above Roy R. Behrens, digital montage titled Dorado (2015).]]
The Cold War has long ago ended [only to have resumed in recent years],
and deconstruction has replaced existentialism on college campuses.
Students are rarely required to read Koestler’s
Darkness at Noon, Sartre, or Camus. Much of
the research of extrasensory perception has been discounted as
unreliable. James V. McConnell, whose conclusions about planaria were
challenged by other scientists, was lucky to survive when he received a
package from the Unabomber in 1985. When Timothy Leary died of prostate
cancer more than a dozen years ago, it was rumored that he had arranged
for his head to be preserved through cryogenic suspension, for
resuscitation in the future.
Shoulder-length hair. Miniskirts. Green Acres. Marshall McLuhan. In
retrospect, nothing from the mid-60s seems as compelling or
sophisticated as it once did. And Koestler’s The Act
of Creation is no exception. Nevertheless, I remain very
grateful for what it taught me—and I am not alone. Scores of others were
also influenced by it, and today there is probably no other work that is
quoted or listed more often in books on creativity, humor, and
problem-solving.{4}
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[[r-r-roy-r-behrens-remembering-arthur-koestler-4.jpg][Robert Frost [in an interview with John Ciardi] “Man likes to bring two things together into one… He lives by making associations, and he is doing well by himself and in himself when he thinks of something in connection with something else that no one ever put with it before. That’s what we call a metaphor.”]]