Three Versions of Classic: The Construction of Gabriel Fauré in the 1920s

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Christopher Moore

Drawing on recent scholarship (Kelly, Pasler, Wheeldon, Fauser) examining the discursive construction of the reputations of well-known Belle-Époque musicians, this article investigates the case of Gabriel Fauré and the ways in which his posthumous legacy was shaped throughout the 1920s in France. Drawing on wide-ranging journalistic and biographical sources, the article argues that the figure of Fauré was increasingly constructed around the concept of the ‘classic’ in the years immediately following his death in 1924. I suggest that the types of ‘classicism’ associated with Fauré in this context were, however, multivalent and largely contingent on the cultural and aesthetic mandates of those ‘reputational entrepreneurs’ that sought to advocate in favour of his posthumous legacy. This article thus examines the notion of Fauré ‘the classic’ as it was discursively constructed in three specific instances: by the French Republic in its State funeral for the composer; by the young post-war generation of composers (especially Georges Auric of the group Les Six), and by the composer, former student, and biographer of Fauré, Charles Koechlin. These cases reveal that Fauré's classicism was articulated in contrasting ways, ranging from a heroic classicism associated with the celebration of national ‘great men’, an aesthetic classicism linked to French musical traditions, or, finally, a classicism derived from the aesthetics and culture of Ancient Greece.

Author(s):  
Catherine Margaret Speck

Australian artists living and working in Paris and London in the Belle Époque and modern eras had a deep engagement with cosmopolitanism in cities that were at the frontiers of international modernism. They experienced the liberation of putting aside issues of nation, and of working in large, alienating but culturally challenging multi-nation environs in the pre and post war years. This paper will explore how two women artists, Hilda Rix in Paris, a hub of internationalism; and Nora Heysen in London, a city ill-described in the Empire language of ‘home’ for Australians, connected with and articulated cosmopolitan culture. Expatriatism facilitated an offshore variant of Australian modernism.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-125
Author(s):  
Valeria Guimarães

O artigo é um estudo sobre a Revue Franco-Brésilienne publicada em fins do século XIX no Rio de Janeiro e que reuniu nomes expressivos da intelectualidade da época. O objetivo desse artigo é analisar um dos periódicos literários que tinha como proposta explícita a cooperação binacional. A análise está focada no papel de alguns de seus editores e colaboradores na consolidação desses vínculos e na constituição de um campo cultural e literário do início do século XX sob uma perpectiva transnacional.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-120
Author(s):  
Klaus Kreiser
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document