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Between Worlds Contents
BETWEEN WORLDS CONTENTS 14 Acknowledgments 16 Introduction Timothy 0. Benson and Eva Forgacs SECTION 1: STYLE AS THE CRUCIBLE OF PAST AND FUTURE Chapter 1: National Traditions Germany Carl Vinnen. "Quousque Tandem," from A Protest of German Artists [1911I Wilhelm Worringer, "The Historical Development of Modern Art," from The Struggle for Art (1911) Czech-Speaking Lands Milos Jiranek, "The Czechness of our Art," Radikatni iisty (1900I Bohumil Kubista, "Josef Manes Exhibition at the Topic Salon," Prehled ii9ii) Poland Juliusz Kaden-Bandrowski, "Wyspiariski as a Painter-Poet (Personal Impressions]," Przeglqd Poranny I1907] Stanistaw Witkiewicz, Excerpts from Jon Matejko (1908) Jacek Malczewski, "On the Artist's Calling and the Tasks of Art" I1912I Wtodzirnierz Zu-tawski, "Wyspiariski's Stained Glass Windows at the Wawel Cathedral," Maski (1918] Hungary Lajos Fulep, Excerpt from Hungarian Art I1916I Yugoslavia Exhibition Committee of University Youth (Belgrade], Invitation Letter (1904) Chapter 2: New Alternatives Prague Emil Filla, "Honore Daumier: A Few Notes on His Work," Volne smery (1910] Pavel Janak, "The Prism and the Pyramid" Umeiecky mesicnik (1911] Otto Gutfreund, "Surface and Space," Umeiecky mesicnik (1912) Emil Filla, "On the Virtue of Neo-Primitivism," Volne smery (1912) Vaclav Vilem Stech, Introduction to the second Skupina exhibition catalogue (1912) Bohumil Kubista, "The Intellectual Basis of Modern Time," Ceska kutturo I1912-13] Josef Capek, Fragments of correspondence I1913] Josef Capek, "The Beauty of Modern Visual Form," Printed [1913-14I Vlastislav Hofman, "The Spirit of Change in Visual Art," Almanoch no rok [1914) Budapest Gyb'rgy Lukacs, "Forms and the Soul," Excerpt from Richard Beer-Hoffmann 11910) Karoly Kernstok, "Investigative Art," Nyugat (1910) Gyorgy Lukacs, "The Ways Have Parted," Nyugat [1910) Karoly Kernstok, The Role of the Artist in Society," Huszadik szazad (1912) Bucharest Ion Minulescu, Fragment from "Light the Torches," Revisto celorlaiti (1908) N. -
Der Erste Weltkrieg Im Widerhall Des Zeit-Echo (1914-1917)
Repositorium für die Medienwissenschaft Kurt Koszyk Vera Grötzinger: Der Erste Weltkrieg im Widerhall des Zeit-Echo (1914-1917). Zum Wandel im Selbstverständnis einer künstlerisch-politischen Literaturzeitschrift 1995 https://doi.org/10.17192/ep1995.2.4475 Veröffentlichungsversion / published version Rezension / review Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Koszyk, Kurt: Vera Grötzinger: Der Erste Weltkrieg im Widerhall des Zeit-Echo (1914-1917). Zum Wandel im Selbstverständnis einer künstlerisch-politischen Literaturzeitschrift. In: MEDIENwissenschaft: Rezensionen | Reviews, Jg. 12 (1995), Nr. 2, S. 185–187. DOI: https://doi.org/10.17192/ep1995.2.4475. Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Dieser Text wird unter einer Deposit-Lizenz (Keine This document is made available under a Deposit License (No Weiterverbreitung - keine Bearbeitung) zur Verfügung gestellt. Redistribution - no modifications). We grant a non-exclusive, Gewährt wird ein nicht exklusives, nicht übertragbares, non-transferable, individual, and limited right for using this persönliches und beschränktes Recht auf Nutzung dieses document. This document is solely intended for your personal, Dokuments. Dieses Dokument ist ausschließlich für non-commercial use. All copies of this documents must retain den persönlichen, nicht-kommerziellen Gebrauch bestimmt. all copyright information and other information regarding legal Auf sämtlichen Kopien dieses Dokuments müssen alle protection. You are not allowed to alter this document in any Urheberrechtshinweise und sonstigen Hinweise auf gesetzlichen way, to copy it for public or commercial purposes, to exhibit the Schutz beibehalten werden. Sie dürfen dieses Dokument document in public, to perform, distribute, or otherwise use the nicht in irgendeiner Weise abändern, noch dürfen Sie document in public. dieses Dokument für öffentliche oder kommerzielle Zwecke By using this particular document, you accept the conditions of vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, aufführen, vertreiben oder use stated above. -
Berliner Beiträge Zur Hungarologie
79 Irene Rübberdt Die aktivistischen Zeitschriften A Tett, Ma und Die Aktion im Zeitraum von 1911 bis 1919. Eine vergleichende Betrachtung Die Studie widmet sich dem typologischen Vergleich zweier aktivistischer Zeitschriften auf der Grundlage des Materials der Berliner Aktion (1911/1932) und der Budapester Tett (Die Tat, 1915/16) bzw0 deren Nachfolgerin Ma (Heute, 1916/1925) in der Zeit vor 192o. Wach dem Selbstzeugnis des führenden Re- präsentanten der ungarischen Avantgarde und Herausgebers der beiden oben genannten Zeitschriften, Lajos Kassák, standen für die ungarischen Zeitschriften sowohl Herwarth Waldens Der 1 Sturm als auch Die Aktion von Franz Pfemfert Modell 0 Gleich- wohl berief sich Kassák in den kunstpolitischen Kontroversen 2 von 1919 wiederholt auf den Aktions-Kreis um Pfemfert, dage- gen wurde die "reine Formkunst" des Sturm in 3 dieser Zeit von der Ma wie von der Aktion explizit abgelehnt 0 Erst nach 1919, als Die Aktion als literarische Zeitschrift ihre Bedeutung verloren hatte, und nach Kassáks Emigration, gab es nicht nur deutlichbeit zwischee Zeichenn Stur,m sonderund Mna 4 auc; dehr ErgebnissAbdruck evo neine Gedichter Zusammenarn Lajo-s Kassáks, Tibor Derys, József Nádass' und Aladár Tamás', Endre r r 5 Gaspars Artikel zur "Bewegung der ungarischen Aktivisten" so- wie die 1923 erfolgte Edition des Ma-Buches mit Gedichten von Kassák im Verlag Der Sturm und die 1 31 • Sturm-Ausstellung vom Mai 1924 mit Werken von Kassák und Nikolaus Braun zeugten nun nicht nur von einer bewußten Kenntnisnahme der ungarischen Strömung, -
Arte Povera, Press Release with Image Copy
SPROVIERI GIOVANNI ANSELMO, JANNIS KOUNELLIS, GIUSEPPE PENONE, EMILIO PRINI recent works preview 4 dec, 6 - 8 pm exhibition 5 dec - 16 feb 23 heddon street london w1b 4bq Sprovieri is delighted to present an exhibition of recent works by Giovanni Anselmo, Jannis Kounellis, Giuseppe Penone and Emilio Prini. The selection of works brings together some of the most influential living artists of the Arte Povera, the Italian artistic movement that in the late 1960s explored art not only using ‘poor materials’ but also conceiving the image as a conscious action rather than a representation of ideas and concepts. Ofering a contemporary transposition of their early subjects and practices, the exhibition reveals how these artists have continuously developed the energy and innovation of their poetics. The work ‘Ultramarine Blue While It Appears Towards Overseas’ by Giovanni Anselmo - especially conceived for this exhibition - reflects the artist’s commitment to create a work which must be ‘the physification of the force behind an action, of the energy of a situation or event’. A deep and bright blue square made with acrylic painting will be outlined by the artist against the white wall of the gallery. Jannis Kounellis contributes to the exhibition with a powerful triptych work: three large sculptures comprising of steel panels, iron beams and tar imprints of an ordinary man coat. The triptych translates the tension and alienation of our contemporary society where modernisation and industrial development are inevitably put in dialogue with our individual and traditional values. Giuseppe Penone’s sculpture ‘Acero (Maple)’ 2005 is inspired by the search for an equal relationship between man and material. -
Annual Report 2013-2014
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Arts, Fine of Museum The μ˙ μ˙ μ˙ The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston annual report 2013–2014 THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, HOUSTON, WARMLY THANKS THE 1,183 DOCENTS, VOLUNTEERS, AND MEMBERS OF THE MUSEUM’S GUILD FOR THEIR EXTRAORDINARY DEDICATION AND COMMITMENT. ANNUAL REPORT ANNUAL 2013–2014 Cover: GIUSEPPE PENONE Italian, born 1947 Albero folgorato (Thunderstuck Tree), 2012 Bronze with gold leaf 433 1/16 x 96 3/4 x 79 in. (1100 x 245.7 x 200.7 cm) Museum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund 2014.728 While arboreal imagery has dominated Giuseppe Penone’s sculptures across his career, monumental bronzes of storm- blasted trees have only recently appeared as major themes in his work. Albero folgorato (Thunderstuck Tree), 2012, is the culmination of this series. Cast in bronze from a willow that had been struck by lightning, it both captures a moment in time and stands fixed as a profoundly evocative and timeless monument. ALG Opposite: LYONEL FEININGER American, 1871–1956 Self-Portrait, 1915 Oil on canvas 39 1/2 x 31 1/2 in. (100.3 x 80 cm) Museum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund 2014.756 Lyonel Feininger’s 1915 self-portrait unites the psychological urgency of German Expressionism with the formal structures of Cubism to reveal the artist’s profound isolation as a man in self-imposed exile, an American of German descent, who found himself an alien enemy living in Germany at the outbreak of World War I. -
A Critique of Humoristic Absurdism
A Critique of Humoristic Absurdism A Critique of Humoristic Absurdism Problematizing the legitimacy of a humoristic disposition toward the Absurd A Critique of Humoristic Absurdism Copyright © 2020 Thom Hamer Thom Hamer All rights reserved. No part of this thesis may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any way or by any means without the prior permission of the author or, when applicable, of the publishers of the scientific papers. Image on previous page: Yue Minjun (2003), Garbage Hill Student number: 3982815 Graphic design: Mirelle van Tulder Date: February 5th 2020 Printed by Ipskamp Printing Word count: 32,397 Institution: Utrecht University Contents Study: Research Master Philosophy Summary 9 Document: Final Thesis Foreword 10 Supervisor: prof. dr. Paul Ziche Introduction 12 Second Reader: dr. Hans van Stralen 1. The Philosophy of Humor 21 Third Reader: prof. dr. Mauro Bonazzi 1.1. A history of negligence and rejection 24 1.2. Important distinctions 33 1.3. Theories of humor 34 1.4. Defense of the Incongruity Theory 41 1.5. Relevance of relief and devaluation 52 1.6. Operational definition 54 2. The Notion of the Absurd 59 2.1. Camusian notion: meaninglessness 61 2.2. Tolstoyan notion: mortality 63 2.3. Nagelian notion: trivial commitments 67 2.4. Modified notion: dissolution of resolution 71 2.5. Justificatory guideline for a disposition toward the Absurd 78 3. Humoristic Absurdism 83 3.1. What is Humoristic Absurdism? 85 3.2. Cultural expressions of Humoristic Absurdism 87 3.3. Defense of Humoristic Absurdism 92 4. Objections against the humoristic disposition toward the Absurd 101 4.1. -
Visitor Figures 2016 Exhibition & Museum Attendance Survey
2 THE ART NEWSPAPER REVIEW Number 289, April 2017 SPECIAL REPORT VISITOR FIGURES 2016 EXHIBITION & MUSEUM ATTENDANCE SURVEY Christo helps 1.2 million people to walk on water While the Whitney breaks the hold of New York’s big two hristo’s triumph in Italy, a space in New York to five artists, including Steve Children admiring Louise Bourgeois at Tate Modern: ravenous appetite for French art McQueen, Lucy Dodd and Michael Heizer, for the institution has hung on to its spot as the world’s abroad and a shake-up in New several weeks at a time. On average, more than most popular Modern and contemporary art museum York are the big stories of The 4,000 visitors saw each of the five presentations, Art Newspaper’s 2016 attend- roughly equivalent to the number that visited the FEMALE ARTISTS DRAW BIG CROWDS ance survey. museum’s Frank Stella retrospective. Christo’s Floating Piers (2016) Despite the Whitney’s rapid rise, MoMA and Female artists feature prominently in our survey. on Lake Iseo—the New York-based artist’s first the Met continue to lead the league in New York. At the Guggenheim Bilbao, Louise Bourgeois’s Cells Coutdoor installation since 2005—was the world’s MoMA remains at the top, thanks to staffers who attracted around 4,600 visitors a day. The Japanese most-visited work of art last year. Christo erected performed each afternoon over a long weekend artist Yayoi Kusama, who in 2014 proved a phenom- 3km of fabric-covered pontoons between an island last October in a production directed by the enon in South America and Asia, continued to pull and the shore and invited the public to walk on French choreographer Jérôme Bel. -
Bibliography
SELECTED bibliOgraPhy “Komentó: Gendai bijutsu no dōkō ten” [Comment: “Sakkazō no gakai: Chikaku wa kyobō nanoka” “Kiki ni tatsu gendai bijutsu: henkaku no fūka Trends in contemporary art exhibitions]. Kyoto [The collapse of the artist portrait: Is perception a aratana nihirizumu no tōrai ga” [The crisis of Compiled by Mika Yoshitake National Museum of Art, 1969. delusion?]. Yomiuri Newspaper, Dec. 21, 1969. contemporary art: The erosion of change, the coming of a new nihilism]. Yomiuri Newspaper, “Happening no nai Happening” [A Happening “Soku no sekai” [The world as it is]. In Ba So Ji OPEN July 17, 1971. without a Happening]. Interia, no. 122 (May 1969): (Place-Phase-Time), edited by Sekine Nobuo. Tokyo: pp. 44–45. privately printed, 1970. “Obŭje sasang ŭi chŏngch’ewa kŭ haengbang” [The identity and place of objet ideology]. Hongik Misul “Sekai to kōzō: Taishō no gakai (gendai bijutsu “Ningen no kaitai” [Dismantling the human being]. (1972). ronkō)” [World and structure: Collapse of the object SD, no. 63 (Jan. 1970): pp. 83–87. (Theory on contemporary art)]. Design hihyō, no. 9 “Hyōgen ni okeru riaritī no yōsei” [The call for the Publication information has been provided to the greatest extent available. (June 1969): pp. 121–33. “Deai o motomete” (Tokushū: Hatsugen suru reality of expression]. Bijutsu techō 24, no. 351 shinjin tachi: Higeijutsu no chihei kara) [In search of (Jan. 1972): pp. 70–74. “Sonzai to mu o koete: Sekine Nobuo-ron” [Beyond encounter (Special issue: Voices of new artists: From being and nothingness: On Sekine Nobuo]. Sansai, the realm of nonart)]. Bijutsu techō, no. -
Download New Glass Review 21
NewG lass The Corning Museum of Glass NewGlass Review 21 The Corning Museum of Glass Corning, New York 2000 Objects reproduced in this annual review Objekte, die in dieser jahrlich erscheinenden were chosen with the understanding Zeitschrift veroffentlicht werden, wurden unter that they were designed and made within der Voraussetzung ausgewahlt, dass sie in- the 1999 calendar year. nerhalb des Kalenderjahres 1999 entworfen und gefertigt wurden. For additional copies of New Glass Review, Zusatzliche Exemplare der New Glass please contact: Review konnen angefordert werden bei: The Corning Museum of Glass Buying Office One Corning Glass Center Corning, New York 14830-2253 Telephone: (607) 974-6479 Fax: (607) 974-7365 E-mail: [email protected] All rights reserved, 2000 Alle Rechte vorbehalten, 2000 The Corning Museum of Glass The Corning Museum of Glass Corning, New York 14830-2253 Corning, New York 14830-2253 Printed in Frechen, Germany Gedruckt in Frechen, Bundesrepublik Deutschland Standard Book Number 0-87290-147-5 ISSN: 0275-469X Library of Congress Catalog Card Number Aufgefuhrt im Katalog der Library of Congress 81-641214 unter der Nummer 81-641214 Table of Contents/In halt Page/Seite Jury Statements/Statements der Jury 4 Artists and Objects/Kunstlerlnnen und Objekte 16 1999 in Review/Ruckblick auf 1999 36 Bibliography/Bibliografie 44 A Selective Index of Proper Names and Places/ Ausgewahltes Register von Eigennamen und Orten 73 Jury Statements Here is 2000, and where is art? Hier ist das Jahr 2000, und wo ist die Kunst? Although more people believe they make art than ever before, it is a Obwohl mehr Menschen als je zuvor glauben, sie machen Kunst, "definitionless" word about which a lot of people disagree. -
Arte Povera Teachers' Pack
From Zero to Infinity: Arte Povera 1962–1972 An Introduction Using the Arte Povera Group Leaders’ Kit We warmly welcome you and your group to Tate Modern and the exhibition Zero to Infinity: Arte Povera 1962–1972. Included in this kit for group leaders is: • this introductory sheet, which includes curriculum links and a post-visit activity • six thematic key-work cards including suggestions for discussion in the gallery, along with colour images • Material Evidence, a photocopiable ‘sample book’ for students to use in the exhibition • an exhibition guide. The kit gives helpful information on the exhibition and can be used alongside the Tate Modern Teachers’ Kit, which outlines our strategies for working in the gallery and gives ideas on structuring and facilitating a group visit. It is available from the Tate shop for £12.99. Introduction to the Exhibition In 1967 the Italian critic Germano Celant coined the phrase Arte The Arte Povera artists also aimed to dissolve the Povera. He used it to describe the work of a group of young boundaries between the exhibition space and the world Italian artists who, since the mid-1960s, had been working in outside, often making works in the landscape, or bringing radically new ways, breaking with the past and entering a elements from the landscape into the gallery (see key-work challenging dialogue with trends in Europe and the US. Less a card 3). A famous example was Jannis Kounellis’s installation of distinctive style than a conceptual approach, Arte Povera 1969, in which he exhibited twelve horses in a gallery in Rome. -
Studia Theodisca ISSN 2385-2917
Studia theodisca ISSN 2385-2917 Maurizio Pirro (Bari) «Wenn sich nach dem Werther die Leute totschießen, so ist das Buch gut; wenn sie auf andere schießen, besser»* L’arte come pratica di costruzione del futuro in Ludwig Rubiner Abstract Both as essay writer and poet Ludwig Rubiner (1881-1920) focuses on art as a revolution- ary practice. He conceives critical understanding of reality as a first step in a radical change of social conditions, which can be seen as the result of an artist’s specific attitude in evoking new worlds. This implies that only a non-realistic art can be politically successful, because it refers to a future horizon without restricting itself to describing the political situation of the time. In this paper, I analyze Rubiner’s strongly utopic art concept involving some typical categories of expressionistic literature like “Geist”, “Gemeinschaft”, “Katastrophe”. Bisognerà decidersi a emancipare una volta per tutte la storiografia della “Klassische Moderne” dall’alternativa tra simbolismo ed espressionismo. Al di là di alcuni comuni presupposti poetologici (primo fra tutti l’idea che le pratiche estetiche abbiano la funzione di ricucire la frattura tra il mondo e le forme della sua percezione, riassorbendo attraverso complessi rituali di invenzione lo spazio vuoto tra la superficie della realtà e il livello di verità profonda nascosto sotto quella superficie), è la natura stessa del campo let- terario di lingua tedesca nel primo ventennio del Novecento a rendere vana e inservibile una divisione netta tra i due movimenti. Distinguere quanto nel- l’opera di un nutrito gruppo di scrittori attivi sulla soglia della Prima guerra mondiale (Benn, Stadler, Hoddis, Trakl, Heym, Blass, Werfel, Schickele, per nominare soltanto i lirici) si collochi sotto l’influenza di una poetica “con- servativa”, destinata a semantizzare l’esistente tramite una fitta rete di cor- rispondenze analogiche evocate dalla parola magica del poeta, da quanto * L’espressione ricorre nel saggio Untertan. -
Nasher Sculpture Center Announces Giuseppe Penone: Being the River, Repeating the Forest
Nasher Sculpture Center Announces Giuseppe Penone: Being the River, Repeating the Forest First U.S. museum exhibition in over 30 years highlights the career of one of the founders of the Arte Povera movement DALLAS, Texas (June 24, 2015) – Nasher Sculpture Center announces a major exhibition of the work of the influential Italian artist, Giuseppe Penone, in an exhibition called Being the River, Repeating the Forest which opens September 19, 2015 and runs through January 10, 2016. Italian artist Giuseppe Penone has played an integral role in the development of art over the past five decades. From his conceptual and performative works of the 1960s and 70s to the large-scale sculptural installations of the past ten years, Penone has explored intimate, sensate, and metaphysical connections with nature. Working in a stunning variety of materials—including clay, wood, stone, metal, plaster, resin, acacia thorns—the artist makes palpable and present the analogous processes of nature and art: carving large trees along their growth patterns to reveal the sapling contained within; elaborating the interior space of his closed hand into a large-scale sculpture that both contains his hand and enlarges the space it contains; rendering the swirling mists of his breath in the cold in tactile clay forms that contain the impression of his body. The exhibition at the Nasher Sculpture Center will feature a selection of work in a variety of materials highlighting the development of Penone’s ideas over the course of his career. “In his exceptionally various and nuanced work, Giuseppe Penone shows us that within the recognizable forms of trees, clay, and stone is housed an immense amount of information, both about specific materials and the human body’s relationship to them,” says Director Jeremy Strick.