Spelling suggestions: "subject:"ehe avantgarde"" "subject:"ehe avantgarda""
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The '85 Movement Avant-garde art in the post-Mao era /Gao, Minglu. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Harvard University, 1999. / Adviser: Norman Bryson. Includes bibliographical references.
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Entre la tradición y la modernidad : el movimiento nicaragüense de vanguardia /Arellano, Jorge Eduardo. January 1992 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Th. doct.--Facultad de filosofía y letras de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 1986. / Notes bibliogr.
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Re-thinking The Limits Of Architecture Through The Avant-garde Formations During The 1960s: Projections And Receptions In The Context Of TurkeySavasir, Gokcecicek 01 February 2008 (has links) (PDF)
An inquiry into the voyage of avant-garde within the domains of art and architecture makes
it evident that avant-garde is ambiguous in meaning as a word, a term, a phenomenon and a
concept. This study aims to decipher avant-garde and to offer a map for its
conceptualization in architecture. Taken not as a monolithic statement but as a unitary
concept incorporating a number of subjects and formations for granted, in this study,
architectural avant-garde is conceptualized as diverse expressions of activated energy of
various subjects that reveal completely different attitudes and productions. Unfolding the
concept in different dimensions, this study is an endeavor to delve deeper into various
layers of theoretical and historical formations / to form a framework for conceptualizing
architectural avant-garde through scanning the twentieth-century avant-gardes / to focus on
the avant-garde formations of the 1960s by applying this conceptual framework, and the
debate on their receptions in the present architectural context of Turkey. Being on the verge
of architecture, the avant-gardes during the 1960s, namely Constant Nieuwenhuys, Yona
Friedman, Japanese Metabolists, Archigram, Archizoom, and Superstudio, point out that
architecture is both an intellectual activity and a physical production. Projections and
resonances of these avant-gardes in the Turkish architectural context of the subsequent
periods are trail blazed through the expressions of a group of receiving subjects from the
Turkish scene of architecture. Hence, this study offers to lay a common ground for debating
on the limits of architecture by forming not only the topography of architectural avantgarde
in this era, but also a & / #8216 / supra-discourse& / #8217 / on architectural avant-garde.
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"The Other Half is Mine": Charlotte Moorman as an Architect of the Avant-GardeBalkcom, Brittney M. 08 1900 (has links)
Charlotte Moorman (1933–1991) was a Juilliard-trained cellist whose life and work made an indelible mark on the development of the American avant-garde. In her career, Moorman acted as a performer, collaborator, composer, administrator and muse. She solely founded the inaugural New York Avant Garde Festival, and subsequently directed fifteen of these festivals between 1963 and 1980, the feat for which she is most widely acknowledged today. Yet, her revolutionary performance practice, which blurred the lines between her life, her body, and her work, and brought into focus the dynamics of corporeality, the feminine body, female nudity and sexuality, and gendered politics within the contexts of musical performance, has so far escaped serious consideration in the written histories of the American avant-garde. This dissertation describes the nature of Moorman's practice as one that evolved to become inherently and irrevocably embodied, explores how this approach fell at odds with the pervasive avant-garde philosophies of music, and illustrates how her work troubles even a feminist musicological analysis. Further, through a contemporary critique of Moorman's oeuvre which centralizes the social, cultural, and political implications of her body in performance as integral to the work, this project offers a retrospective visibility to the artist which allows for a reframing of her practice as foundational to the aesthetic development of the postwar musical avant-garde. By way of these efforts, Moorman's legacy is presented as one that is both historically significant and vital to current and future musicological discourse.
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A Changing of the Guard: The Evolution of the French Avant-Garde from Italian Futurism, to Surrealism, to Situationism, to the Writers of the Literary Journal Tel QuelPapalas, Mary Laura 24 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Second life of Soviet photomontage, 1935-1980sAkinsha, Konstantin January 2013 (has links)
This dissertation explores the development of Soviet photomontage from the second half of the 1930s to the end of the 1970s. Until now, the transformation of the modernist medium and its incorporation into the everyday practice of Soviet visual propaganda during and after the Second World War has not attracted much scholarly attention. The firm association of photomontage with the Russian Avant-garde in general, and with Constructivism in particular, has led art historians to disregard the fact that the medium was practised in the USSR until the final days of the Soviet system. The conservative government organisations in control of propaganda preserved satirical photomontage in its post-Dadaist phase and Heartfield-like form, finding it useful in the production of negative propaganda.
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Louis Zukofsky and the Objectivist project, 1927-1934Clarke, John Wedgwood January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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anekdotaUnknown Date (has links)
anekdota is an exploration of the form of short short fiction. The exploration contains original works of fiction as short as five words and as long as twelve-hundred words. The exploration seeks new forms for fiction by frustrating and manipulating our traditional sense of story structure. At times, the exploration also investigates a form of conceptual art known as "found language" whereby original material is created by transforming, reframing, and collaging previously published material. anekdota translates from the Greek as "unpublished things." / by Scott Wood. / Thesis (M.F.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2011. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2011.
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Images under control : pessimism, humour and stupidity in the digital ageRothwell, Ian James Pirie January 2017 (has links)
This thesis offers a periodization of the present according to which contemporary art and visual culture are understood to be symptomatic of an increasingly pervasive pessimistic social, political and ecological outlook. This pessimism I will claim is what is authentically new about our contemporary cultural forms, which are directed towards a particular form of humour and stupidity. Core elements in the periodization include the limitation of imaginative horizons expressed in the well-known remark of Fredric Jameson’s that it is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism, as well as the pervasive sense that nature is in a state of perpetual and endemic crisis and the idea that modern computing technology is making us stupider than we have ever been before. I argue that these issues are symptomatic of what Gilles Deleuze, in 1990, termed the societies of Control – a world of corporate power, ubiquitous computing, data extraction and financial capitalism that has intensified since its early diagnosis. However, dominant narratives of art and visual culture continue to theorize artistic production according to traditionally avant-garde categories of resistance, criticality, transgression and subversion. This presumes art to have an agency that is difficult to imagine in the current social situation. In this respect, the thesis in part constitutes a critical reflection on the pressures placed upon our existing models of art and visual culture - for example, and centrally, the idea of an ‘avant-garde’ - by current social and technological conditions. Building on these observations, the thesis proposes a new model of contemporary art and visual culture that has no agency: images under control that are formed, as epiphenomena, by technological apparatuses of Control; studying examples such as extreme sports stunts, internet memes, online trolls, bad quality jpegs and impassive ‘artworks’. The purpose is to ask what value we can place on these emergent cultural forms, which seem to mirror, reflect and reiterate a pessimistic worldview deeply entrenched in the societies of Control.
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Noise, sound and objecthood: the politics of representation in avant-garde musicHall, Alexander David January 2016 (has links)
This essay offers both a historical analysis of twentieth century avant-garde practices relating to representation in music, and a prescriptive model for contemporary methods of composition. I address the taxonomy problem in classical music, clarifying the ontological divide identified by German musicologist Michael Rebhahn Contemporary Classical music and New Music.
I demonstrate how neoliberalism has developed a Global Style (Foster 2012) of "Light Modernity,” evident in both contemporary architecture and music alike. The central problem facing composition today is the fetishization of materials, ultimately derived from music's refusal to allow the question of representation to be addressed.
I argue that composers have largely sought to define noise as sound-in-itself, eliminating the possibilities of representation in the process. Proposing instead that composers should strive to tackle representation head-on in the 21st century, I show how Jacques Rancière provides a model in which noise and sound—representation and abstraction—function in a conjoined, yet non-homogenized aesthetic regime. Governed by what he calls the "pensiveness of the image,” it allows for a renewed art form that rejects repetition and neoliberalism, re-connecting to the spirit of the avant-garde without slavishly echoing either its outmoded aesthetics or dogmatic philosophies.
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