Moving Modernism : The Urge to Abstraction in Painting, Dance, Cinema

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Moving Modernism : The Urge to Abstraction in Painting, Dance, Cinema

  • 著者名:Andrew, Nell
  • 価格 ¥6,861 (本体¥6,238)
  • Oxford University Press(2020/03/11発売)
  • ポイント 62pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780190057282
  • eISBN:9780190057305

ファイル: /

Description

The emergence of modern dance and the early history of cinema ran concurrent with the European avant-garde's development of pictorial abstraction in the first decades of the 20th century. However, many assume that modernist abstraction resulted from a century of natural, autonomous evolution to painting styles and tastes. In Moving Modernism, author Nell Andrew challenges this assumption. By examining dance and film created during this period, she argues that performative modes of art created the link between bodily movement and movement depicted in modernist paintings. In a seeming paradox, dance and film - durational arts, involving real bodies in space-participated in the development of abstract art.With archival material collected in North America and Europe, Moving Modernism resurfaces lost performances, identifies working methods, and establishes the circles of aesthetic influence and reception for avant-garde dance pioneers and experimental film makers from the turn of the century to the interwar period. Reexamining the motivation that fueled the emergence of abstraction, Andrew claims that painters sought meaning not only in the material and formal picture but also in temporal and sensorial experience. Andrew looks at major figures and intellectual movements including Loïe Fuller and Symbolism; Valentine de Saint-Point and the Cubo-Futurist and neo-Symbolist movements; and early cinematic abstraction from Edison and the Lumières to Hans Richter and Marcel Duchamp. Close examinations of each figure show that theatrical display, embodied self-projection, and kinesthetic desire are not necessarily in opposition to pictorial abstraction; in fact, they expand our understanding of the urges that created modern art.

Table of Contents

AcknowledgementsIntroduction: The Medium is a MuscleChapter one: The Idea in Motion: Loïe Fuller at the BanquetChapter two: Futurist Moment/um: Valentine de Saint-Point's Métachorie Chapter three: Dada Dance: Sophie Taeuber's Visceral AbstractionChapter four: Living Art: Akarova's Music-ArchitectureChapter five: The Dance of Abstract CinemaList of IllustrationsSelected BibliographyIndex

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