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The Collages of Kurt Schwitters

The Collages of Kurt Schwitters

The Collages of Kurt Schwitters

Tradition and Innovation
Dorothea Dietrich, Princeton University, New Jersey
July 1993
Hardback
9780521419369
Out of Print
Hardback
Paperback

    At the end of World War I, the German artist Kurt Schwitters dramatically broke with dominant artistic traditions by adopting collage as the primary medium for his literary and visual production. In The Collages of Kurt Schwitters: Tradition and Innovation, Dorothea Dietrich demonstrates how collages function for the artist. Characterising Schwitters's work as the product of the deep social and political crises of the Weimar Republic, Dietrich challenges the prevalent outlook that twentieth-century art can be reduced to a revolutionary struggle of avant-garde artists against an entrenched artistic tradition. The Collages of Kurt Schwitters argues for a more nuanced view, in which revolutionary art forms are exposed as containing much that is traditional and, indeed, reactionary.

    • Shows how Schwitters's work is the product of deep social and political crises of the Weimar Republic
    • Challenges the prevalent view that twentieth-century art can be reduced to a revolutionary struggle of avant-garde artists against an entrenched artistic tradition

    Product details

    July 1993
    Hardback
    9780521419369
    256 pages
    262 × 211 × 19 mm
    0.966kg
    107 b/w illus. 8 colour illus.
    Unavailable - out of print

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. Political and cultural chaos and the formation of Merz
    • 2. Art after the war: expressionism and dada
    • 3. Merz and expressionism
    • 4. The invention of a new language
    • 5. Play with chaos: the Aquarelle
    • 6. Political inscription
    • 7. Refashioned traditions
    • 8. The Merzbau or the cathedral of erotic misery
    • 9. The fragment reformed: Schwitters's Merzbau
    • Conclusion
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Dorothea Dietrich , Princeton University, New Jersey