EXPRESSIONS IN ART BY SHELDON CHENEY REVISED EDITION WITH 210
ILLUSTRATIONS TUDOR PUBLISHING COMPANY NEW YORK REVISED EDITION
COPYRIGHT, 1948, BY L1VERIGHT PUBLISHING CORPORATION COPYRIGHT,
1934, BY LIVER1GHT PUBLISHING CORPORATION All rights reserved no
part of thib book may be reproduced in any form without permission
in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to
quote brief passages in connection with a review written for
inclusion in a magazine or newspaper. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA PREFACE MANY artists and students will face a new essay
on Modernist art with the sort of impatience manifested by John
Marin. I had asked for photographs of his paintings. What he
exclaimed. Another damn book Contemplating the burden of recent
works in this field, I too am impelled to ask why I who once
reformed and wrote no books for seven years should now offer a
volume about Expressionism. My reason, I think, was this. There are
books enough serving as introductions to Modernism, recounting its
early history and pav ing the way to the first glimmers of
understanding. But there is, in English, no book pretending to
analysis of the characteristic ele ments in Expressionist art.
Eleven years ago I wrote a frankly introductory work. Therein I was
concerned to break down prejudice against the new art. I was trying
to remove the blinders placed by academic teaching over the eyes of
the average citizen, was hoping to pry open, a little, the too
tightly closed mind of the student and observer. In those days, in
the early Twenties, Modernist art was on the defensive. One
broached the subject with apologies and explana tions. One took up
arms self-consciously, evenheroically, under the barrage of
writings laid down by academic critics in defense of what is now
obviously the old art. The whole subject of Modernism was
surrounded by an atmosphere of battle, with the radicals on the
challenging side. The introductory and apologetic books, my Primer
and the variously admirable works of Wilenski, Bell and Eddy,
belong to that earlier time, when the public was un convinced and
the Moderns a beleaguered minority. Today conditions are reversed.
If the battle is to continue, it is ittie cbnserVarUveS Vi icJ finH
themselves on the defensive, who must - ., sue for ari ucljence.
Expressionism if you will allow me the word probatioiiiHy4 is
widely accepted, studied, even respectable. In this book,
therefore, if I am wise, only minor effort will be expended to
convince the reader that radical Modern art is logical and
inevitable. I shall take for granted open-mindedness, if not a
practiced appreciation of old and contemporary Expressionist works.
After some clearing of the ground, and the establishing of defini
tions, I shall explain, so far as my present understanding serves,
the special means by which artists are accomplishing a return to
essen tially expressive and creative art. I plan to describe
technical methods, report theories, and sketch so much of the
social back ground as may seem to have characteristic influence
upon advanced practice. My first aim is to aid the student in
opening the way to under standing and enjoyment. I hope, in
addition, that practicing artists will find the book clarifying
though I want no one to seek herein a formula for creative
accomplishment. True Expressionism goes deeper than that. The book
is at once my mostindependent and personal expres sion upon art,
and a confession that I have no original theory of Modernism. Even
while relying upon my own reactions to and study of living art
works, I can claim no originality for the explana tions and
analyses set forth and certainly I make no pretense to omniscience
in any part of the vast field surveyed. I have merely collated more
recorded opinions and expositions than any earlier writer, and I am
attempting a digest in readable form, along the line of my own
seeing...
General
Imprint: |
Read Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
November 2008 |
First published: |
November 2008 |
Authors: |
Sheldon Cheney
|
Dimensions: |
216 x 140 x 28mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover - Laminated cover
|
Pages: |
444 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4437-2122-6 |
Categories: |
Books >
Arts & Architecture >
The arts: general issues >
General
|
LSN: |
1-4437-2122-0 |
Barcode: |
9781443721226 |
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