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New Realisms. Modern Realist Approaches across the Czechoslovak Scene, 1918–1945

Podrobné informace

Kategorie:

Umění

Rok vydání:

2021

Místo vydání:

Liberec

Jazyk:

anglicky

Počet stran:

496

ISBN:

978-80-87810-43-9

catalog Tištěná verze

2 535 Kč1 568 Kč

skladem

Koupit

1568 Kč

Publikaci lze zakoupit na pracovišti:
ÚOP v Liberci

Over the course of fifteen chapters, the collective monograph New Realisms explores a subject of Czech and Slovak art history that has not previously been studied in such a comprehensive manner. The result of many years of research by a team of thirteen authors, the book offers a summary overview of modern realist approaches to art in the Czech lands and Slovakia in 1918–1945, expanded to include chapters on selected aspects of realist art before and after this timeframe, plus case studies from the related fields of film, literature, and music. Much attention has been paid to photography, a medium that contributed significantly to transforming the eras art and its visuality. The photography of that era is often given the umbrella term New Photography,” which shares with modern realisms a focus on modern life. In this publication, modern realist approaches are presented as an alternative to programmatically innovative tendencies – as a unique artistic style, formed by local conditions, that reflected contemporary developments abroad. Although most art made during this time in the Czech lands and Slovakia looked to France, there also existed a notable tendency towards new realist approaches that reflected the latest developments in Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and the United States. New realist artists were often members of Czechoslovakias ethnic minorities, and until recently the linear modernist view of art history has tended to view some of them as outsiders.

The book traces and evaluates theoretical concepts then and now. It follows the domestic interpretation of the eras theoretical understanding of modern realisms, defines the relevant terminology, and uses specific examples to document the specific nature of Czechoslovak art and its relationship to foreign art. Besides art labeled New Objectivity, the authors have also focused their attention on other, locally conditioned, forms of modern realism, including works by so-called regionalists.”

Contents: 
  • Ivo Habán / How to Read New Realisms
  • Ivo Habán / Czechoslovakia: New Realisms in the Avant-Garde Era
  • Zsófia Kiss-Szemán / Artistic Events in Slovakia in the Interwar Period with Regard to the Minority Art Scene
  • Helena Musilová / The Amorphousness of New Objectivity in Photography
  • Bohunka Koklesová / New Realisms in Slovak Photography
  • Jana Migašová, Ivo Habán / The Dark Side of the Idyll. Verisms in the Czech Lands and Slovakia
  • Alena Pomajzlová / On Objects From Metaphysical Painting to the Realism of Group 42
  • Milan Pech / Group 42. The Realism of the Invisible
  • Ivo Habán / Simple-Minded Reactionaries or Sophisticated Modernists. The Czechoslovak Scene and American Regionalism
  • Keith Holz / Not Quite Objective or New: Representations of Craftsmanship and Industrial Labor in the Art of Interwar Czechoslovakia
  • Jiří Horníček / Between Artistic Vision and Random Chance. New Objectivity in Czech Film at the Turn of the 1920s and 1930s
  • Barbora Svobodová / On the Trail of New Objectivity in Literature
  • Lubomír Spurný / Czech Musical Culture and New Objectivity
  • Anna Habánová / Between Beauty and Truth. Old Realisms in Czech Art
  • Barbora Kundračíková / The Parliament of Things. Pictorial Realisms in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century

Selected Bibliography

Index

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