Roger Fry, Clive Bell and American Modernism (Cultural Interactions: Studies in the Relationship between the Arts 44) (2020. XVIII, 278 S. 21 Abb. 229 mm)

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Roger Fry, Clive Bell and American Modernism (Cultural Interactions: Studies in the Relationship between the Arts 44) (2020. XVIII, 278 S. 21 Abb. 229 mm)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 278 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781788749275

Full Description

When the Bloomsbury critics Roger Fry and Clive Bell introduced an aesthetically conservative English public to recent Parisian avant-garde painting, they explained its disconcerting imagery by way of a late nineteenth-century metaphysical tradition which had long intrigued musicians and Symbolist writers on the European continent. The Post-Impressionist aesthetic they devised advocated a direct response to the formal ingenuity of the work of art without recourse to prior knowledge and emphasized the significance of visionary genius, albeit to the detriment of narrative acuity and technical accomplishment, values hitherto upheld by the Edwardian art establishment. The provocation was calculated, the author suggests, and its domestic ramifications were predictable: the reaction of an Anglo-conformist public in New York, on the other hand, was anything but.

Recreating an Anglo-American dialogue inspired by Fry and Bell, and framed within a period encompassing Fry's Manet and the Post-Impressionists exhibition in 1910 and Alfred Barr Jr's Cubism and Abstract Art exhibition in 1936, the author demonstrates how key components of Bloomsbury's aesthetic bypassed a pre-existent modernist practice in New York and were instead taken up by an urban intelligentsia which adapted them to the requirements of an increasingly professionalized institutional practice during the 1920s.

Contents

List of Illustrations - Preface - Acknowledgements - Introduction - An Anglo-American Aesthetic - A Sort of Social-Historical Vividness - Schopenhauer's Contemplative Aesthetic - The Genius as Artist and Modern Master - Post-Impressionism as Cultural Discourse - Aesthetic Theory as Cultural Cause - Talk of Post-Impressionism - Clive Bell: Middlebrow Conversations - Mr Bell's Aesthetical Joy-Ride - An Ancient Deity: Significant Form in America - 'An Intimation of How to Look': Form Encounters Pragmatism - Roger Fry: Towards a Formalist Orthodoxy - I. A. Richards, the New Criticism and Charles Mauron - Parallel Narratives: Fry's Cézanne and Barr's Picasso - Conclusion - Bibliography - Index.

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