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How to Be Avant-Garde: Modern Artists and the Quest to End Art

Contributor(s): Falconer, Morgan (Author), Wiggins, Brian (Read by), Wiggins, Brian (Contribution by)

ISBN: 9798228520806

Publisher: Tantor Audio

$45.95
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Pub Date: February 18, 2025

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Unabridged

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.00" H x 0.00" L x 0.00" W ( 0.00 lbs) pages

BISAC Categories:

Art | Movements | Modernism | Individual Artists | General

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Reacting to the tumultuous crises of the twentieth century, especially the horrors of World War I, avant-garde artists and writers sought to destroy art by transforming it into the substance of everyday life. Following the evolution of these revolutionary groups, How to Be Avant-Garde charts its pioneers and radical ideas. Avant-gardists challenged the confines of the definition of art along with the confines of the canvas itself. Art historian Morgan Falconer starts with the Futurist founder Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, whose manifesto seeded avant-gardes across Europe. In turn, Dadaists Hugo Ball and Emmy Hennings sought to replace art with political cabaret, and the Surrealists tried to exchange it for tools to plumb the unconscious. He guides us through the Russian Constructivists with their adventures in advertising and utopianism and De Stijl with the geometric abstractions of Piet Mondrian. The Bauhaus broke more boundaries, transmuting art into architecture and design. Finally, the Situationists swapped art for politics, with their ideas inspiring the 1968 Paris student protests. How to Be Avant-Garde is a journey through the interlocking networks of these creative lives with their visions of a better world, their sometimes sympathetic but often strange conversations, and their objects and writings that defied categorization.

Brief description: Morgan Falconer, a critic and art historian, teaches at Sotheby's Institute of Art. He is the author of Painting Beyond Pollock and has written for publications including the Times (London), Frieze, the Economist, and Art in America. He lives in Queens, New York.

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