Results for 'Modernist art'

996 found
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  1.  7
    Vitalist modernism: art, science, energy and creative evolution.Fae Brauer (ed.) - 2023 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    This book reveals how, when, where and why vitalism and its relationship to new scientific theories, philosophies and concepts of energy became seminal from the fin de siècle until the Second World War for such Modernists as Sophie Tauber-Arp, Hugo Ball, Juliette Bisson, Eva Carrière, Salvador Dalì, Robert Delaunay, Marcel Duchamp, Edvard Munch, Picasso, Yves Tanguy, Gino Severini and John Cage. For them Vitalism entailed the conception of life as a constant process of metamorphosis impelled by the free flow of (...)
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  2.  15
    Anarchist Modernism: Art, Politics, and the First American Avant-Garde.Marjorie Perloff - 2004 - Common Knowledge 10 (1):153-154.
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  3.  46
    Modernist art criticism: Hegemony and decline.Roxie Davis Mack - 1994 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 52 (3):341-348.
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  4.  10
    Adorno's Modernism: Art, Experience, and Catastrophe.Espen Hammer - 2015 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Theodor W. Adorno's aesthetics has dominated discussions about art and aesthetic modernism since World War II, and continues to inform contemporary theorizing. Situating Adorno's aesthetic theory in the context of post-Kantian European philosophy, Espen Hammer explores Adorno's critical view of art as engaged in reconsidering fundamental features of our relation to nature and reality. His book is structured around what Adorno regarded as the contemporary aesthetician's overarching task: to achieve a vision of the fate of art in the modern world, (...)
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  5.  5
    Surveying the avant-garde: questions on modernism, art, and the Americas in transatlantic magazines.Lori Cole - 2018 - University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Examines art and literature of the Americas through the lens of the questionnaire, a genre as central as the manifesto to the history of the avant-garde. Demonstrates how modernism and the avant-garde were debated at the very moment of their development and consolidation"--Provided by publisher.
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  6.  23
    HAMMER, ESPEN. Adorno's Modernism: Art, Experience, and Catastrophe. Cambridge University Press, 2015, 242 pp., $99.99 cloth. [REVIEW]Justin Neville Kaushall - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 74 (3):316-318.
  7. Greenberg, Kant, and Aesthetic Judgments of Modernist Art.Robert R. Clewis - 2008 - AE: Canadian Aesthetics Journal 18.
  8.  25
    Post-Theory: Reconstructing FilmOn the Edge of America: California Modernist Art, 1900-1950.Allen Casebier, David Bordwell, Noel Carroll & Paul Karlstrom - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (3):313.
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  9.  53
    Untwisting the serpent: modernism in music, literature, and other arts.Daniel Albright - 2000 - Chicago, Ill: University of Chicago Press.
    From its dissonant musics to its surrealist spectacles (the urinal is a violin!), Modernist art often seems to give more frustration than pleasure to its audience. In Untwisting the Serpent, Daniel Albright shows that this perception arises partly because we usually consider each art form in isolation, even though many of the most important artistic experiments of the Modernists were collaborations involving several media--Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring is a ballet, Gertrude Stein's Four Saints in Three Acts is (...)
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  10.  17
    The Arrival of the Machine: Modernist Art in Europe, 1910-25.Robert Herbert - 1997 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 64.
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  11.  10
    Making Modernism: Picasso and the Creation of the Market for Twentieth Century Art.Michael C. FitzGerald - 1995 - Farrar Straus & Giroux.
    A study of Picasso's status in the art community and his influence on the avant-garde market follows his early year search for a gallery and his monumental rise to fame, noting his popularity among dealers and his commercial strategies.
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  12.  5
    Modernism and the Museum: Asian, African, and Pacific Art and the London Avant-Garde.Rupert Richard Arrowsmith - 2010 - Oxford University Press.
    By demonstrating that many of the concepts and styles associated with Modernism were actually derived directly from cultures such as Japan, China, Korea, India, Egypt, Assyria, West Africa, and the Pacific Islands, this book provides an entirely new way of looking at the evolution of Modernist art and literature in the West.
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  13. Art-house cinema, avant-garde film, and dramatic modernism.Bert Cardullo - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 45 (2):1-16.
    The most important modes of film practice, in my view, are art-house cinema and the avant-garde, both of which contrast with the classical Hollywood mode of film practice. While the latter is characterized by its commercial imperative, corporate hierarchies, and a high degree of specialization as well as a division of labor, the avant-garde is an “artisanal” or “personal” mode. Avant-garde films tend to be made by individuals or very small groups of collaborators, financed either by the filmmakers alone or (...)
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  14.  7
    Modernism's History: A Study in Twentieth-century Art and Ideas.Bernard Smith - 1998 - Yale University Press.
    The history of twentieth-century visual arts can no longer be written as a succession of avant-garde movements, contends eminent art historian Bernard Smith in this stimulating book. He argues that a return to the concept of period style is inevitable and that modernism--the dominant "style" of art that emerged at the end of the nineteenth century and continued through the 1960s--deserves recognition as a period style. Smith renames this period Formalesque since it is no longer modern and since it emphasizes (...)
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  15.  47
    Art as Abstract Machine: Guattari's Modernist Aesthetics.Stephen Zepke - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (2):224-239.
    Felix Guattari was a modernist. He not only liked a lot of modernist artists, but his ‘aesthetic paradigm’ found its generative diagram in modern art. The most important aspect of this diagram was its insistence on the production of the new, the way it produced a utopian projection of a ‘people to come’, and so a politics whose only horizon was the future. Also important for Guattari's diagram of the ‘modern’ were the forces of abstraction, autonomy and immanent (...)
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  16.  5
    From modernism to presentism: On the destination of art.David Roberts - 2024 - Thesis Eleven 180 (1):3-14.
    The idea of modern art presupposes the rise of historicism and the sense of progress since the Enlightenment. Once art, however, conceives itself as progressive and hence modern, it is confronted by the paradoxes of progress: progress renders the modern obsolete at the same time as it seeks to give itself meaning by positing a goal, a destination that would be the end purpose and hence the end of progress. As a consequence, modern art is impelled to constantly transcend its (...)
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  17.  6
    High Art: Charles Baudelaire and the Origins of Modernist Painting.David Carrier - 1996 - Penn State Press.
    Moving from the grand tradition of Delacroix to the images of modern life made by Constantin Guys, this movement from "high" to "low," from the unified world of correspondances to the fragmented images of contemporary city life, motivates Baudelaire's equivalent to the post-1968 turn away from formalist art criticism.
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  18.  31
    Modernism and “Aesthetic Experience”: Art, Aesthetics – and the Role of Modernism.Kyndrup Morten - 2016 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 25 (51).
    The role and influence of Modernism is the focus of this article. Modernism’s lasting and unforeseeable influence is due to its key importance to the development of the general conditions of art within modernity. Along with Modernism, the implications of the modern system of art became visible for real. Modernism produced the necessity of rethinking the distinction between “art” and “the aesthetic,” based on their original foundations in the 18th century, respectively – a call for a “divorce” after the long-lived (...)
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  19.  49
    Madness and modernism: insanity in the light of modern art, literature, and thought.Louis Arnorsson Sass - 1992 - Harvard University Press.
    Madness and Modernism provides a phenomenological study of schizophrenic disorders, criticizing some standard conceptions of these disorders. Sass argues that many aspects of this group of disorders can actually involve more sophisticated (albeit dysfunctional) forms of mind and experience.
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  20.  8
    Modernism and phenomenology: literature, philosophy, art.Ariane Mildenberg - 2017 - [London]: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Braiding together strands of literary, phenomenological and art historical reflection, Modernism and Phenomenology explores the ways in which modernist writers and artists return us to wonder before the world. Taking such wonder as the motive for phenomenology itself, and challenging extant views of modernism that uphold a mind-world opposition rooted in Cartesian thought, the book considers the work of modernists who, far from presenting perfect, finished models for life and the self, embrace raw and semi-chaotic experience. Close readings of (...)
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  21. Art's Self-Disclosure: Hegelian Insights into Cinematic and Modernist Space.C. A. Tsakiridou - 2013 - Evental Aesthetics 2 (1):44-72.
    This article uses Hegel’s analysis of the Romantic form to elucidate the relationship between aesthetic space and subjectivity in modernist painting (Paul Klee) and cinema (Sergei Eisenstein). The movement that brings art to realization in Hegel thus includes genres and modalities of art that did not exist in his time: in cinema and modernist painting, the Idea or truth of art evolves and brings itself to completion. Plasticity, the movement of aesthetic form toward self-expression, abandons the rigid substantiality (...)
     
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  22.  31
    The Modernist Fallacy: philosophy as art's undoing [1].John Haldane - 1988 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 5 (2):159-173.
    ABSTRACT The essay is concerned with the widely held view that contemporary fine art is obscurantist, shallow and unrewarding of attention. It is argued that the opposition between common opinion and the advocates of modernism rests upon a philosophical disagreement about the nature and value of art. An account of aesthetic experience is then presented and illustrated by reference to Raphael's The School of Athens. This account shows the reasoning implicit in modernism to rest upon a fallacy relating to the (...)
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  23.  13
    Modernism London Style: The Art Deco Heritage.Niels Lehmann - 2012 - Hirmer Publishers.
    In the 1920s, London was a city on the cusp of change. Just as dance halls and jazz-age decadence displaced wartime austerity, a new generation of artists and designers sought to enliven the city's architecture, erecting dazzling buildings in the emerging art deco style. In contrast with the aging Victorian structures that dotted the city, these bright and colorful buildings--from the Hoover factory to the Ideal House by Raymond Hood, who later designed New York's Rockefeller Center--communicated the city's aspirations as (...)
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  24.  21
    The total work of art in European modernism.David Roberts - 2011 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Library.
    In this groundbreaking book David Roberts sets out to demonstrate the centrality of the total work of art to European modernism since the French Revolution.
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  25. Art is Dangerous Nonsense: Reflections on Kant's Aesthetics and Frye's Modernist Update.James Cunningham - 2009 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 32 (2-4):144-156.
     
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  26.  7
    The Art of Enigma: The de Chirico Brothers and the Politics of Modernism.Keala Jane Jewell - 2004 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    In this interdisciplinary book, Keala Jewell reunites Giorgio de Chirico with his brother, Alberto Savinio, a prolific writer and painter who has been kept at the margins of the discussion of Surrealism and, more generally, the culture politics of twentieth-century Italy. Yet as Jewell demonstrates, the brothers worked together during their formative years in Munich and Paris and always shared, on the one hand, a drive to salvage Mediterranean myth and history and, on the other, a deep involvement with art’s (...)
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  27.  18
    Art and Form: From Roger Fry to Global Modernism.Andrei Pop - 2020 - British Journal of Aesthetics 60 (4):502-505.
    Art and Form: From Roger Fry to Global ModernismROSESAMPenn State University Press. 2019. pp. 224. £71.95.
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  28.  35
    Against Modernism and Postmodernism on Art and Entertainment: A Kristeller Thesis of Entertainment.Andy Hamilton - 2022 - British Journal of Aesthetics 63 (1):41-56.
    This article develops a Wittgensteinian treatment of the relationship between art and entertainment, combining universal and historically conditioned features.
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  29. Art objects: Modernism vs. Literalism.Robert Vance - 1988 - Diálogos. Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad de Puerto Rico 23 (51):139-152.
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  30. Modernism and Post-Modernism: Neo-Colonial Viewpoint—Concerning the Sources of Modernism and Post-Modernism in the Visual Arts.Bernard Smith - 1994 - Thesis Eleven 38 (1):104-117.
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  31.  5
    Vibratory Modernism.Anthony Enns & Shelley Trower (eds.) - 2013 - New York, NY: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Vibratory Modernism" is a collection of original essays that will enable scholars and students to explore how vibrations provided a means of bridging science and art -- two fields that became increasingly separate over the course of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The book demonstrates the vital role played by vibrations in the fields of physics, physiology, spiritualism, and by new vibratory technologies, in helping to shape the way modernist art was made and viewed. The chapters are placed (...)
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  32.  7
    Modernism and Contemporary Art.Nikos Papastergiadis - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):466-469.
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  33.  19
    The Literate Eye: Victorian Art Writing and Modernist Aesthetics.Rachel Teukolsky - 2009 - Oup Usa.
    Rather than focusing on German philosophy or the French avant-gardes, as many books on the history of aesthetics do, Teukolsky takes up British responses to modern art controversies, thus providing a unique view on the development of artistic forms and art history. She considers the plentiful archive of Victorian "art writing"-essays addressed to the visual arts- to reveal the key role played by nineteenth-century writers in the rise of modernist Anglo-American aesthetics. Though Victorians are most often associated with realism, (...)
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  34.  29
    Reading Into It or Hearing It Out? Cavell on Modernism and the Art Critic's Hermeneutical Risk.Robert Engelman - 2022 - In Greg Chase, Juliet Floyd & Sandra Laugier (eds.), Cavell's 'Must We Mean What We Say' at 50. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 121-134.
    In this essay, I examine how Cavell's discussion of the challenges and attendant risks faced by artworks to be genuine rather than "fraudulent" informs his discussion of the challenges and attendant risks faced by art critics to offer interpretations rather than misinterpretations of artworks. Moreover, I clarify how this relation between Cavell's philosophy of art and his philosophy of criticism is mediated by his discussion of modernism. For Cavell, modernism does not so much introduce challenges for artworks as exacerbate them. (...)
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  35.  3
    Littératures modernistes et arts d'avant-garde.Pierre Taminiaux - 2013 - Paris: Honoré Champion éditeur.
    Cet ouvrage étudie dans sa première partie des formes diverses d'écriture, de la critique d'art au récit en passant par la poésie et le manifeste. Leurs auteurs, de Beckett à Michaux et de Paz à Tzara, ont été liés aux avant-gardes de la première moitié du vingtième siècle (en particulier à dada et au surréalisme) tout en empruntant une voie originale. Il aborde ensuite dans sa seconde partie les rapports de peintres comme Magritte et Léger à l'architecture. En outre, il (...)
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  36.  37
    Madness and Modernism: Insanity in the Light of Modern Art, Literature, and Thought (review).Willard Bohn - 1993 - Philosophy and Literature 17 (2):367-368.
  37. Bernard Smith, Modernism's History: A Study in Twentieth-Century Art and Ideas.P. Beilharz - 1999 - Thesis Eleven 59:121-122.
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  38.  21
    The Total Work of Art in European Modernism.James Corby - 2011 - The European Legacy 19 (7):920-922.
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  39.  13
    Shattered Forms: Art Brut, Phantasms, Modernism.Allen S. Weiss - 1992 - State University of New York Press.
    A thorough history of the involvement of Australia's Northern Territory in World War II. Includes photos, extensive notes and bibliography.
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  40.  8
    The Medium Itself: Modernism in Art and Philosophy’s Linguistic Self-Analysis.Garry L. Hagberg - 2018 - In Ana Falcato & Antonio Cardiello (eds.), Philosophy in the Condition of Modernism. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 101-126.
    Multiple definitions of Modernism have been put forward, often focusing on the character or features of the works of art and literature produced within this cultural movement. Here I want to focus, instead, on the sensibility of Modernism as this has manifested itself to be especially concerned not with the content of representation, but with the materials out of which a representation is made. Through an analysis of eighteenth-century English portraiture, nineteenth-century French political painting, and up to twentieth-century Modernist (...)
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  41.  7
    10 Sinister Modernists Subtle energies and yogic-tantric echoes in early Modernist culture and art.John Bramble - 2013 - In Geoffrey Samuel & Jay Johnston (eds.), Religion and the subtle body in Asia and the West: between mind and body. New York: Routledge. pp. 8--192.
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  42. Madness and Modernism: Insanity in the Light of Modern Art, Literature, and Thought. [REVIEW]Laura Matthews - 2018 - Metapsychology Online Reviews 22 (19).
    Madness and Modernism is undoubtedly one of the most profound and perspicacious treatments of an illness that is utterly baffling to most laypersons and academics alike. Sass artfully brings together two obscure, complex, and unnerving realms -- the schizophrenic and the modern and postmodern aesthetic -- into mutual enlightenment. The comparisons between schizophrenic symptoms such as loss of ego boundaries, perspectival switching, and world catastrophe with modern literature and art is so adroit that it is almost eerie. The reader finds (...)
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  43. The future of art. The importance of being odd : Nerdrum's challenge to modernism.Paul A. Cantor - 2016 - In Elizabeth Millán (ed.), After the Avant-Gardes: Reflections on the Future of the Fine Arts. Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Company.
     
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  44.  18
    Can the Arts Survive Modernism? (A Discussion of the Characteristics, History, and Legacy of Modernism).George Rochberg - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (2):317-340.
    In trying to say what modernism is , we must remind ourselves that it cannot and must not—to be properly described and understood—be confined only to the arts of music, literature, painting, sculpture, theater, architecture, those arts with which we normally associate the term “culture.” Modernism can be said to embrace, in the broadest terms, not only the arts of Western culture but also science, technology, the family, marriage, sexuality, economics, the politics of democracy, the politics of authoritarianism, the politics (...)
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  45. Aristotle's Theory of Art and the challenges of aesthetic Modernism.Tobias Dangel - 2010 - Philosophische Rundschau 57 (1):84 - 90.
     
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  46.  28
    Mannerism, Baroque, and Modernism: Deleuze and the Essence of Art.N. Rachlin, R. Scullion & S. van Tuinen - 2014 - Substance 43 (1):166-190.
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  47. "Modernism, Post-Modernism, Realism: A Critical Perspective for Art": Brandon Taylor. [REVIEW]Roger Taylor - 1988 - British Journal of Aesthetics 28 (3):287.
     
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  48.  6
    Art and Form: From Roger Fry to Global Modernism by Sam Rose. [REVIEW]Michalle Gal - 2020 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 2:183-188.
  49.  5
    Kate Davis: Re-Visioning Art History after Modernism and Postmodernism.Victoria Horne - 2015 - Feminist Review 110 (1):34-54.
    This article engages with the work of Scotland-based artist Kate Davis (b.1977). The discussion begins to articulate a framework for understanding Davis's work within a feminist logic of re-visioning and re-citing, strategies that are explicated and suggested as paradigmatic to feminist art production since 1970. Fundamentally, the article explores Davis's complex strategies for adopting and adapting motifs from within the archives of art history, arguing that her work constitutes a mode of visual research and historiography.
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  50.  2
    Man Ray, African Art, and the Modernist Lens.Wendy Grossman - 2009 - International Arts and Artists.
    "Exhibition dates: The Phillips Collection, Oct. 10, 2009-Jan. 10, 2010; University of New Mexico Art Museum, Feb. 6-May 30, 2010; University of Virginia Museum of Art, Aug. 7-Oct. 10, 2010; University of British Columbia, Museum of Anthropology Oct. 29, 2010-Jan. 23, 2011." --T.p. verso.
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