“The beginnings of Dada were not the beginnings of art‚ but disgust.”1 Modernist movements rejected traditional art styles‚ turning against the classical‚ more formal aesthetics in exchange for newer‚ more abstract ways of viewing the world. The emergence of Dada as an anti-art movement was described by Kleiner as: "a phenomenon bursting forth in the midst of the economic and moral crisis [of war-torn Europe]‚ a savior‚ a monster‚ which would lay waste to everything in its path... a systematic
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conventions in art including concepts of originality and authenticity. It also corresponds to ideas about politics‚ society and culture and looks at how artists often appropriate (borrow) ideas or imagery from other sources/artists. MODERNISM Defining Modernism: - Refers to the period dating from about the 1860s to 1970s - Used to describe the style of the ideology of the art produced during this era - Modern art arose as part of the Western society’s attempt to come to terms with urban
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The Moderns 1914-1939 The American Dream: Pursuit of a Promise Modernism called for bold experimentation and wholesale rejection of traditional themes and styles. America is considered a land of new Eden: a land of beauty‚ bounty‚ and unlimited promise. The American Dream is based on optimism‚ opportunity‚ progress. A Crack in a the World: Breakdown of Beliefs and Traditions The center of literary life had shifted from New England and spread across America. Two new theories‚ Marxism and psychoanalysis
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Modernism refers to the artistic and philosophical movement that occurred in the nineteenth century; the movement challenged past ideas and concepts. T.S Eliot is considered as one of the twentieth century’s major poets; his poem ‘the love song of j. Alfred Prufrock’ has gone down as one of the major works of the Modernist movement. ‘Prufrock’ is a dramatic monologue that follows a man striving for meaning in a suddenly industrial modern road‚ typical themes of modernism. The isolation and displacement
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Post - Modernism and Mass Culture 1 P M rnism and M C ost ode ass ulture Post Modernism/20/1/98/P.Covington/Media Disc This is a relatively new development and there are few sources that present clear and readable accounts of it. It is a reaction to the belief of postmodernists that Marx concentrated excessively on production‚ at the cost of consumption. Introduction This concept‚ despite its variety of meanings and definitions‚ is used to refer to many aspects of social life from
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Modernism: * Chaotic society due to the first world war * First called ‘avant-garde’‚ artists (such as musical writers‚ artists‚ poets‚ etc.) saw themselves as alienated from the establishment and aimed to shock and challenge existing social conventions by being chaotic‚ obscure and abtract. * Modernism is a movement that breaks away from classical and traditional forms. Creating different perspectives by breaking boundaries. It’s constantly changing and breaks away from the Victorian
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As some critics contended‚ postmodernism represents a break with the modernist notion that architecture should be technologically rational‚ austere and functional‚ discuss the ways in which one postmodern architect has developed strategies which overcome these tendencies. Juxtaposition is seen between the characteristics of early 20th century modern architecture and the artistic endeavours of postmodernism that followed. To represent the ‘Less is More’ (R.Venturi‚ 1966‚ pg16) notion the modernist
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Madonna and Child with Saints Mark and Peter When I visited The Walters Art Museum for the first time‚ I was extremely captivated and pleased. I quickly recognized themes and characteristics of the Baroque time period from my knowledge of it learned in class. After walking around the museum and looking at many Italian works and all the work from the time period we have covered in class‚ I was drawn to several pieces. I am always impressed by paintings and all the little details put into it. Since
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Question: Write a short note on Modernism with special reference to Literature Almost every generation of society has a habit of reacting against the past by declaring itself “modern.” This quarrel between the Ancients and the Moderns is a cyclical phenomenon. Modernism was a similar trend that spanned all of the arts and even spilled into politics and philosophy during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Anyone who looks at the evolution of western culture must note a distinct change
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civilized attitudes toward their fellow men‚" (Mosse‚ 9). For all three authors‚ modernity is the major force for change- the change that results in the rise of the national socialist party. For Ekstein‚ culture is a social phenomenon in which modernism is the principal urge of the time. He focuses on social change featuring the Great War as a great catalyst for change‚ "For our preoccupation with speed‚ newness‚ transience‚ and inwardness- with life lived‚ as the jargon puts it‚ in the fast lane’-
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