Der fliegende Pfeil

2010 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-89
Author(s):  
Katharina Münchberg

Die Kunst der Moderne, insbesondere die Lyrik, entwickelt eine eigene ästhetische Konzeption der Bewegung, die mit der klassischen Vorstellung der Bewegung als räumlicher Veränderung eines Körpers in der Zeit bricht. Baudelaires À une Passante, Rimbauds Bateauivre und Paul Valérys Le Cimetière marin sind drei paradigmatische Texte der französischen Moderne, in denen Bewegung als zeiträumliches Kontinuum reflektiert und in der Dynamik der Sprache materialisiert wird. Die moderne Kunst, so erweist sich, ist selbst Bewegung und stiftet Bewegung. Sie wird zu einer Kunst des Werdens, nicht der Substanz, zu einer Kunst der reinen sinnlichen Wahrnehmung, nicht des Begriffes, zu einer Kunst der diskontinuierlichen Erlebnisse, nicht der Erfahrung.<br><br>The art of the modern age, particularly the lyric poetry, develops an own aesthetic conception of the movement which breaks with the classic idea of the movement as a spatial change of a body in time. Baudelaires À une Passante, Rimbauds Bateau ivre and Paul Valérys Le Cimetière Marin are three paradigmatic texts of the French modern age, in which movement is reflected as a time-space-continuum and materialized in the dynamic of language. Modern art is itself movement and causes movement. It becomes an art of the development, not sub- stance, an art of pure sensory perception, not concept, an art of discontinuous adventures, not experience.

Author(s):  
Marion Thain

Chapter 1 offers important historical and conceptual contexts for the late nineteenth century. The chapter suggests that ‘aestheticist lyric poetry’ might be usefully conceptualised ‘through the twin impetuses of conceptual expansion and formal reduction’. It then goes on to outline the context of ‘cultural modernity’, to which it is suggested aestheticist lyric poetry is responding, in order to define further the ‘crisis’ in lyric. It also introduces the three conceptual frames that set the remit for the three parts of the book; these are three key axes around which lyric poetry operates: time, space and subjectivity. Chapter 1 ends with a preliminary case study from the work of ‘Michael Field’ (the assumed name of Katharine Bradley and Edith Cooper) to demonstrate in practice the relevance of the three frames to aestheticist poetry.


2013 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 417-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
LEON WAINWRIGHT

Art of the transnational Caribbean has come to be positioned by an understanding of the African diaspora that is oriented to an American “centre,” a situation to be explored for what it reveals about the hegemonic status of the United States in the discipline of contemporary art history. The predominant uses of the diaspora concept both in art-historical narratives and in curatorial spaces are those that connect to United States-based realities, with little pertinence to a strictly transnational theorization. This has implications for how modern art and contemporary art are thought about in relation to the Caribbean and its diaspora, in a way that this article demonstrates with attention to a number of artists at multiple sites, in Trinidad, Guyana, Britain and America.


2019 ◽  
pp. 39-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. V. Shmeleva ◽  
A. A. Klyuev

The given article is analysing images of the invisible by example of sensory perception visual cultural images by a human being. Qualia, which is a problem phenomena in philosophical society, to this day, provoking discussions of the very fact of its existence, is embodied in art, and claim a human being not be, what he or she is really, but wants to be. Such a desire is expressed in an active position of art to intensify taste for life, adorn our reality, show an alternative for a possible development of a human being, who becomes a culture character. In culture, a great deal is based not on presentation of other worlds, but on their sensation of other worlds, and the latter changes his or her concept of the art visual constituent. Moreover, such a concept translates a new aesthetics of beauty through visible images, and the aesthetics raise a human being over his or her homeliness. In many respects, this phenomena is originated from semiotic practices of modern art, embedded the idea into human conscience as follows: He or she is always a creator and co-author of the all new, that is why, should strain every effort to endow art images with his or her symbolic sense and increase importance of the new. Facing an artwork, a human being raised its aesthetical status, attributing the art his or her individual senses, which his or her self-sentiment is traced with. At the same time, cultural images emphasise internal human beauty with its semiotic models; such a phenomena generates the modern idea of Kalokagathia, connected with aesthetics of being felt beauty.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-408
Author(s):  
Hana Leaper

In 1927, Claude Flight proposed that the linocut, a comparatively new art form, could create a new relationship between the modern public and modern art. It was, he theorised, ideally suited for the mass market as it was relatively small, it was relatively cheap, and its directness accorded with the spirit of the modern age. Many works by Flight and other artists of the Grosvenor School, at which Flight taught from 1926 to 1930, democratically aligned artist, subject, and viewer and focused on scenes of contemporary public life, from manual labour to recreational sports, mass spectator events to commuter experience. This article investigates the ambiguous middlebrow position of the Grosvenor School linocuts, which never achieved the widespread popularity that Flight anticipated or cultivated the broad, aspirational audience he envisioned for these works. It poses that Flight's utopian vision for mass modernism was frustrated by his limited comprehension of the ‘average man’ his linocuts sought to address, and the absence of suitable critical and commercial apparatus to enable the public to meet him on the terms he desired.


2013 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 462-474
Author(s):  
Alejandro A. Vallega
Keyword(s):  

Abstract Paul Klee’s sense of modern art and his own painting as the channeling of the originary movement of life leads to an insight beyond modern art, and back towards such dynamic cosmological experiences as that of the Onas people of Patagonia. In their daily life and their rituals their painted bodies expressed the living force of their cosmos (often the rituals marked the experiencing of transformation and passage), an originary energy that occurred at the limit of what one may call art and nature. In engaging Klee’s painting and drawing, one is brought to such an open space of living transformative movement; one finds a place wider than our present imagination, a time-space that in our being exposed to his works and experience remains for us to inhabit.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-94
Author(s):  
Anders Odenstedt

This paper discusses Hans-Georg Gadamer’s account of what he sees as a major change in the approach to the Western philosophical and aesthetic traditions that began in the second half of the eighteenth century, and the results of this change today. According to Gadamer, these traditions ceased to be binding at this time and became objects of historical research. Instead of being seen even as potential sources of insight, traditional knowledge claims and works of art were subjected to historical and aesthetic analysis. And Gadamer holds that these approaches have partially come to encompass the present as well. Thus, modern art has often downplayed cognitive and pedagogical tasks in proceeding in a purely aesthetic, playful way. And the study of history has been seen as providing insight into the contextually determined nature of presuppositions, those of the modern age included. According to Gadamer, this unduly limits the possibilities of both art and history to provide learning.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ursina Teuscher ◽  
David Brang ◽  
Lee Edwards ◽  
Marguerite McQuire ◽  
Vilayanur S. Ramachandran ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

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