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Downloaded from Brill.Com10/04/2021 08:07:20AM This Is an Open Access Chapter Distributed Under the Terms of the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 License
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR HISTORY, CULTURE AND MODERNITY www.history-culture-modernity.org Published by: Uopen Journals Copyright: © The Author(s). Content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence eISSN: 2213-0624 L’Art pour l’Art or L’Art pour Tous? The Tension Between Artistic Autonomy and Social Engagement in Les Temps Nouveaux, 1896–1903 Laura Prins HCM 4 (1): 92–126 DOI: 10.18352/hcm.505 Abstract Between 1896 and 1903, Jean Grave, editor of the anarchist journal Les Temps Nouveaux, published an artistic album of original prints, with the collaboration of (avant-garde) artists and illustrators. While anar- chist theorists, including Grave, summoned artists to create social art, which had to be didactic and accessible to the working classes, artists wished to emphasize their autonomous position instead. Even though Grave requested ‘absolutely artistic’ prints in the case of this album, artists had difficulties with creating something for him, trying to com- bine their social engagement with their artistic autonomy. The artistic album appears to have become a compromise of the debate between the anarchist theorists and artists with anarchist sympathies. Keywords: anarchism, France, Neo-Impressionism, nineteenth century, original print Introduction While the Neo-Impressionist painter Paul Signac (1863–1935) was preparing for a lecture in 1902, he wrote, ‘Justice in sociology, har- mony in art: same thing’.1 Although Signac never officially published the lecture, his words have frequently been cited by scholars since the 1960s, who claim that they illustrate the widespread modern idea that any revolutionary avant-garde artist automatically was revolutionary in 92 HCM 2016, VOL. -
1 Tomasz Dziewicki University of Warsaw Intensivism As a Tool of An
III. International Forum for doctoral candidates in East European art history, Berlin, 29th April 2016, organized by the Chair of Art History of Eastern and East Central Europe, Humboldt University Berlin Tomasz Dziewicki University of Warsaw XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Intensivism as a Tool of an Art Historian In 1897 in Warsaw, the art critic, Cezary Jellenta, published in a weekly magazine "Głos" the article titled Intensivism. This article in its times did not influence on a polish art, but nowadays a category of intensivism created by Jellenta can be seen as an useable tool from the point of view a art historian. Jellenta noticed in his article a new trend in painting of the end of the century. In his mind modern art turned to a subjective way of perception of reality. Presentation of ordinary objects and phenomena, which are known by a viewer, in work of art tends to experience them anew. The art critic maintained a role of personal experience of powers of nature through a painting and the fact that this power may be embodied with the soul of an artist. At the beginning of his paper he refered to anachronistic examples of Andreas Achenbach's and Anders Zorn's work but also pointed out Arnold Böcklin, Władysław Podkowiński or Józef Pankiewicz as founders of the new movement. Jellenta paid attention to a modern composition, simplification and painting synthesis, which enable to express reality better and deeper. He applies a category, separated plastically and semantically from a representation, of main motif , which, as Jellenta wrote, "tunes our soul". In fact it is an attempt to transfer the music theory of Leitmotif by Richard Wagner on the ground of the painting. -
Vincent Van Gogh the Starry Night
Richard Thomson Vincent van Gogh The Starry Night the museum of modern art, new york The Starry Night without doubt, vincent van gogh’s painting the starry night (fig. 1) is an iconic image of modern culture. One of the beacons of The Museum of Modern Art, every day it draws thousands of visitors who want to gaze at it, be instructed about it, or be photographed in front of it. The picture has a far-flung and flexible identity in our collective musée imaginaire, whether in material form decorating a tie or T-shirt, as a visual quotation in a book cover or caricature, or as a ubiquitously understood allusion to anguish in a sentimental popular song. Starry Night belongs in the front rank of the modern cultural vernacular. This is rather a surprising status to have been achieved by a painting that was executed with neither fanfare nor much explanation in Van Gogh’s own correspondence, that on reflection the artist found did not satisfy him, and that displeased his crucial supporter and primary critic, his brother Theo. Starry Night was painted in June 1889, at a period of great complexity in Vincent’s life. Living at the asylum of Saint-Rémy in the south of France, a Dutchman in Provence, he was cut off from his country, family, and fellow artists. His isolation was enhanced by his state of health, psychologically fragile and erratic. Yet for all these taxing disadvantages, Van Gogh was determined to fulfill himself as an artist, the road that he had taken in 1880. -
Vincent Van Gogh, Who Grew up Walking the Dutch Countryside
"Sorrowful yet always rejoicing," Vincent van Gogh, who grew up walking the Dutch countryside, traveled through life seeking the eternal "Light that rises in the darkness"- like these swans readying for flight south of Amsterdam. From the pain and beauty of his journey, he created masterworks of passion, including penetrating self-portraits, such as this one at age 34. Van Gogh likened painting to performing music. "Whether I really sang a lullaby in colors," he wrote, "I leave to the critics." National Geographic, October, 1997 By JOEL L. SWERDLOW, ASSISTANT EDITOR Photographs by LYNN JOHNSON THE LETTERS FROM VINCENT VAN GOGH to his brother Theo are yellowed. Some are torn at the corners or have holes from aging. Acid from ink eats through the cheap paper. I have come to this bombproof vault in the cellar of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam to begin my search for Vincent. Who was this man who said he "sang a lullaby in colors:' and why does he have such a hold on us? His paintings sell for the most money; his exhibitions attract the highest number of visitors; reproductions of his work-on socks, sheets, party napkins, coffee cups-permeate homes and offices; the song "Vincent" has sold more than ten million copies since 1971; movies mythologize his life. No other artist, at any time in any culture, has been more popular. THE 650 LETTERS from Vincent to Theo fill three volumes. Their first surprise is immediate: I knew that Theo financed Vincent's painting and had assumed Theo was the big brother. -
La Relève Critique D'albert Aurier
La relève critique d’Albert Aurier Julien Schuh To cite this version: Julien Schuh. La relève critique d’Albert Aurier. Colloque international ” Les revues, laboratoires de la critique (1880-1920) ”, Nov 2007, Le Mans, France. hal-00987276 HAL Id: hal-00987276 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00987276 Submitted on 5 May 2014 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. LA RELÈVE CRITIQUE D’ALBERT AURIER Julien Schuh Il ne s’agit pas pour moi de revenir une nouvelle fois sur Aurier, découvreur héroïque de Gauguin et de van Gogh, méconnu et pourtant tant lu. Ce qui m’a intéressé dans sa figure, c’est moins sa présence que sa disparition : en mourant opportunément le 5 octobre 1892, à vingt-sept ans, d’une fièvre typhoïde qu’il refusa crânement de faire soigner, Aurier nous a donné l’occasion d’observer ce que l’effacement d’une figure importante dans un champ critique donné peut révéler de la structuration dudit champ. Cet instant de tension met à nu les rouages et permet de mesurer les influences réelles, les polarisations, et d’analyser, par l’appel d’air créé, les effets de carambolage, la redistribution des critiques, des éloges et des blâmes. -
Van Gogh Museum Journal 2002
Van Gogh Museum Journal 2002 bron Van Gogh Museum Journal 2002. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam 2002 Zie voor verantwoording: http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/_van012200201_01/colofon.php © 2012 dbnl / Rijksmuseum Vincent Van Gogh 7 Director's foreword In 2003 the Van Gogh Museum will have been in existence for 30 years. Our museum is thus still a relative newcomer on the international scene. Nonetheless, in this fairly short period, the Van Gogh Museum has established itself as one of the liveliest institutions of its kind, with a growing reputation for its collections, exhibitions and research programmes. The past year has been marked by particular success: the Van Gogh and Gauguin exhibition attracted record numbers of visitors to its Amsterdam venue. And in this Journal we publish our latest acquisitions, including Manet's The jetty at Boulogne-sur-mer, the first important work by this artist to enter any Dutch public collection. By a happy coincidence, our 30th anniversary coincides with the 150th of the birth of Vincent van Gogh. As we approach this milestone it seemed to us a good moment to reflect on the current state of Van Gogh studies. For this issue of the Journal we asked a number of experts to look back on the most significant developments in Van Gogh research since the last major anniversary in 1990, the centenary of the artist's death. Our authors were asked to filter a mass of published material in differing areas, from exhibition publications to writings about fakes and forgeries. To complement this, we also invited a number of specialists to write a short piece on one picture from our collection, an exercise that is intended to evoke the variety and resourcefulness of current writing on Van Gogh. -
Art 150: Introduction to the Visual Arts David Mccarthy Rhodes College, Spring 2003 414 Clough, Ext
Art 150: Introduction to the Visual Arts David McCarthy Rhodes College, Spring 2003 414 Clough, Ext. 3663 417 Clough, MWF 11:30-12:30 Office Hours: MWF 2:00- 4:00, and by appointment. COURSE OBJECTIVES AND DESCRIPTION The objectives of the course are as follows: (1) to provide students with a comprehensive, theoretical introduction to the visual arts; (2) to develop skills of visual analysis; (3) to examine various media used by artists; (4) to introduce students to methods of interpretation; and (5) to develop skills in writing about art. Throughout the course we will keep in mind the following two statements: Pierre Auguste Renoir’s reminder that, “to practice an art, you must begin with the ABCs of that art;” and E.H. Gombrich’s insight that, “the form of representation cannot be divorced from its purpose and the requirements of the society in which the given language gains currency.” Among the themes and issues we will examine are the following: balance, shape and form, space, color, conventions, signs and symbols, representation, reception, and interpretation. To do this we will look at many different types of art produced in several historical epochs and conceived in a variety of media. Whenever possible we will examine original art objects. Art 150 is a foundation course that serves as an introduction for further work in studio art and art history. A three-hour course, Art 150 satisfies the fine arts requirement. Enrollment is limited to first- and second-year students who are not expected to have had any previous experience with either studio or art history. -
9 /12Ème Tournée
1981 L'ETOILE-ABSINTHE 9 /12ème Tournée B.M. LAVAL ADULTE 2118122 SOCIETE DES AMIS D'ALFRED JARRY SOCIETE DES AMIS D'ALFRED JARRY Siège Social : Rue du Château PENNE DU TARN 81140 CASTELNAU DE MONTMIRAL L'ETOILE -ABSINTHE ALFRED JARRY, PONT-AVEN & AUTRES LIEUX Cotisation 1982 : membre fondateur : 130 F membre actif : 100 F Pour expédition par voie aérienne ajouter 25 francs. Les cotisations sont à verser au nom de La Société des Amis d'Alfred Jarry C.C.P. 2836 31 L Toulouse, ou par chèque bancaire. - SOMMAIRE - Dans ce numéro, par Noël Arnaud page 9 DOSSIER PEINTURE. ALFRED JARRY... Minutes I page 16 Minutes II page 22 Minutes III page 27 Les Indépendants page 30 Vallotton page 32 Neuvième exposition à la Libre Esthétique page 34 Le regard d'Alfred Jarry, par Sylvain-Christian David . page 37 PONT-AVEN... Quelques notes sur Charles Filiger, par Jos Pennée et S.-C. D page 45 Jarry et Seguin page 58 Jarry et Gauguin page 66 Sérusier juge la peinture du XIXo siècle par N.A page 73 Jarry et Denis page 76 ...ET AUTRES LIEUX. Jarry et Bonnard page 85 Jarry et Sarluis page 89 Jarry et Moucher, par Alain Mercier page 99 Jarry et Rousseau page 102 Jarry et Osbert page 104 Jarry et Ravier page 106 Jarry et Picasso page 109 Jarry et Amédéo page 111 Remerciements page 112 » ETUDES A propos d'Ubu sur la Butte et de la censure, par François Caradec page 117 Jarry à l'épreuve, par Henri Béhar page 119 Menus comptes et propos rendus page 126 M. -
Archives Des Musées Nationaux Direction Des Musées De France (Série AA)
Archives des musées nationaux direction des musées de France (série AA) Répertoire numérique n° 20150333 Hélène Brossier, Audrey Clergeau, Camille Fimbel, Guillaume Monnot, archivistes sous la direction de la mission des archives du ministère de la Culture et de la communication à partir des inventaires rédigés par les agents des Archives des musées nationaux Première édition électronique Archives nationales (France) Pierrefitte-sur-Seine 2015 1 Mention de note éventuelle https://www.siv.archives-nationales.culture.gouv.fr/siv/IR/FRAN_IR_054219 Cet instrument de recherche a été rédigé avec un logiciel de traitement de texte. Ce document est écrit en ilestenfrançais.. Conforme à la norme ISAD(G) et aux règles d'application de la DTD EAD (version 2002) aux Archives nationales, il a reçu le visa du Service interministériel des Archives de France le ..... 2 Archives nationales (France) Sommaire Archives des musées nationaux-Direction des musées de France (série AA) 10 Courrier départ 13 Juin-Décembre 1928 13 Janvier-Juin 1929 13 Juillet-Décembre 1929 13 Janvier-Mai 1930 13 Juin-Septembre 1930 13 Octobre-Décembre 1930 13 Janvier-Avril 1931 13 Mai-Août 1931 13 Septembre-Décembre 1931 13 Janvier-Avril 1932 13 Mai-Juillet 1932 13 Août-Novembre 1932 13 Décembre 1932-Janvier 1933 14 Février-Avril 1933 14 Mai-Juin 1933 14 Juillet-Septembre 1933 14 Octobre-Novembre 1933 14 Décembre 1933-Janvier 1934 14 Février-Mars 1934 14 Avril-Mai 1934 14 Juin-Juillet 1934 14 Août-Septembre 1934 14 Octobre-Novembre 1934 14 Décembre 1934-Janvier 1935 14 Février-Mars -
Pont-Aven School (1886-1895)
Pont-Aven School (1886-1895) Paul Gauguin Paul Sérusier Emile Bernard Meijer de Haan Henry Moret Władysław Ślewiński Pont-Aven (Caldecott 1888) Roderic O’Conor New York Public Library Émile Jourdan Maxime Maufra Eric Forbes-Robertson Charles Laval Ernest de Chamaillard IM Charles Filiger Robert Bevan Armand Séguin Compiled by Jan Verkade Malcolm A Moore Ph.D. Cuno Amiet Mogens Ballin Location Brest St Briac Quimper Pont-Aven Rennes Le Pouldu Lorient Brittany Pont-Aven vu du Bois d’Amour (1892) Indianapolis Museum of Art Pont-Aven Le Pouldu Paul Gauguin 1848-1903 Moisson en Bretagne (1889) Courtauld Institute of Art La Vision après le Sermon (1888) Scottish National Gallery Bretonnes près de la Mer (1889) National Museum of Western Art Le Gardien de Porcs (1888) Los Angeles County MoA Bonjour Monsieur Gauguin (1889) National Gallery Prague Le Moulin David (1894) Musée d’Orsay Récolteuses Moisson au Bord de la Mer de Sarrasin (1891) Musée d’Orsay (1888) CP Émile Bernard 1865-1935 Pont à Pont-Aven (1891) CP Breton Women in the Meadow (1888) Musée d’Orsay Breton Women Attending a Pardon (1892) Dallas Museum of Art Les Bretonnes aux Ombrelles (1892) Musée d’Orsay Paul Sérusier 1864-1927 Lavandières (1886/97) Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Cueilleur d’Algues (c1890) Indianapolis Museum of Art Le Talisman (1888) Musée d’Orsay Les Mangeurs des Serpents (1894) National Museum in Warsaw La Lutte Bretonne (1890-91) Musée d’Orsay Ferme au Pouldu (1890) National Gallery of Art Paysage Jaune (1892) Tate Gallery Aller au Marché, Bretagne (1892) Indianapolis -
Thesis Is That It Was Crucial for Any Artist to Employ Specific Exhibition Strategies in Order to Be Noted and Appreciated in This Plenitude of Art Works
UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Foreign artists versus French critics Exhibition strategies and critical reception at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris (1884- 1914) van Dijk, M.E. Publication date 2017 Document Version Final published version License Other Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): van Dijk, M. E. (2017). Foreign artists versus French critics: Exhibition strategies and critical reception at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris (1884-1914). General rights It is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulations If you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: https://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible. UvA-DARE is a service provided by the library of the University of Amsterdam (https://dare.uva.nl) Download date:07 Oct 2021 Foreign Artists versus French Critics: Exhibition Strategies and Critical Reception at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris (1884-1914) by Maite van Dijk University of Amsterdam 2017 Foreign Artists versus French Critics: Exhibition Strategies and Critical Reception at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris (1884-1914) ACADEMISCH PROEFSCHRIFT ter verkrijging van de graad van doctor aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam op gezag van de Rector Magnificus prof. -
Gauguin: Artist As Alchemist
Janet Whitmore exhibition review of Gauguin: Artist as Alchemist Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 16, no. 2 (Autumn 2017) Citation: Janet Whitmore, exhibition review of “Gauguin: Artist as Alchemist,” Nineteenth- Century Art Worldwide 16, no. 2 (Autumn 2017), https://doi.org/10.29411/ncaw. 2017.16.2.14. Published by: Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art Notes: This PDF is provided for reference purposes only and may not contain all the functionality or features of the original, online publication. License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License Creative Commons License. Whitmore: Gauguin: Artist as Alchemist Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide 16, no. 2 (Autumn 2017) Gauguin: Artist as Alchemist Art Institute of Chicago June 25–September 10, 2017 Grand Palais, Paris October 11, 2017–January 22, 2018 Catalogue: Gauguin: Artist as Alchemist. Gloria Groom, editor, with contributions by Dario Gamboni, Hariet K. Stratis, Ophélie Ferlier- Bouat, Claire Bernardi, Allison Perelman, Isabelle Cahn, Estelle Bégué, Nadège Horner, and Elsa Badie Modiri. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 2017. 336 pp.; 408 color and 11 b&w illus.; chronology of materials and methods; bibliography; index. $65.00 ISBN: 9780300217018 Since 1988 when the Art Institute of Chicago collaborated with the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, and the Musée d’Orsay on The Art of Paul Gauguin, the artist has been the subject of extensive scholarly scrutiny. Exhibitions and publications have focused on nearly every aspect of Gauguin’s life and analyzed it from every conceivable theoretical perspective. The most recent exhibition, Gauguin: Artist as Alchemist, opened in June 2017 at the Art Institute of Chicago before traveling to the Grand Palais in Paris in October.