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portada The Myth of Abstraction: The Hidden Origins of Abstract art in German Literature: 223 (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture, 223) (en Inglés)
Formato
Libro Físico
Editorial
Año
2021
Idioma
Inglés
N° páginas
310
Encuadernación
Tapa Dura
ISBN13
9781640141049

The Myth of Abstraction: The Hidden Origins of Abstract art in German Literature: 223 (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture, 223) (en Inglés)

Andrea Meyertholen (Autor) · Camden House · Tapa Dura

The Myth of Abstraction: The Hidden Origins of Abstract art in German Literature: 223 (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture, 223) (en Inglés) - Andrea Meyertholen

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Reseña del libro "The Myth of Abstraction: The Hidden Origins of Abstract art in German Literature: 223 (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture, 223) (en Inglés)"

Once upon a time (or more specifically, in 1911!) there was an artist named Wassily Kandinsky who created the world's first abstract artwork and forever altered the course of art history - or so the traditional story goes. A good story, but not the full story. The Myth of Abstraction reveals that abstract art was envisioned long before Kandinsky, in the pages of nineteenth-century German literature. It originated from the written word, described by German writers who portrayed in language what did not yet exist as art. Yet if writers were already writing about abstract art, why were painters not painting it? To solve the riddle, this book features the work of three canonical nineteenth-century authors - Heinrich von Kleist, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Gottfried Keller - who imagine, theorize, and describe abstract art in their literary writing, sometimes warning about the revolution it will cause not just in art, but in all aspects of social life. Through close readings of their textual images and visual analyses of actual paintings, Andrea Meyertholen shows how these writers anticipated the twentieth-century birth of abstract art by establishing the necessary conditions for its production, reception, and consumption. The first study to bring these early descriptions of abstraction together and investigate their significance, The Myth of Abstraction writes an alternative genealogy featuring the crucial role of literature in shaping abstract art in aesthetic, cultural, and social terms.Table of ContentsIntroduction: The Many Origins of Abstract ArtApocalypse Now: Heinrich Von Kleist's Sublime De-Framing of Caspar David Friedrich's Der Mönch Am Meer (1810)The Kleistian Sublime Is Now: Kazimir Malevich, Mark Rothko, Barnett NewmanThe Clouding of Perception: Seeing The (Un)Real Potential for Abstraction in the Poetry and Science of Goethe's Clouds (1821)In the Service of Clouds or Optical Illusion?: Romanticism, Pointillism, and ImpressionismDriven to Distraction and from Abstraction: The Birth and Death of Abstract Art in Gottfried Keller's Der Grüne Heinrich (1854/55, 1879/80)Inside the Mind and Outside the Margins: The Unruly Lines of Paul Klee, André Masson, and Cy TwomblyEpilogue: Laocoön and His Sisters: The Future of Literature and Art

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