Abstract
The essay draws on the author‘s specialist expertise in the history and theories of the full spectrum of positions adopted by artists within the movement, and on current research into the structure and character of the Parisian avant-garde, as this formation became consolidated in the pre-First World War decade, to a considerable extent as a consequence of the activities and influence of the Cubist movement.
The essay‘s research question is 'what was the spread of Cubism‘s concerns, and how did the several orientations within it differ, and why?‘. Its answers are based partly on research for the author‘s PhD (Courtauld Institute, 1985) and published since, in three books and numerous articles, and partly on his new and current research and writing on the emergence and professional consolidation of the Parisian artistic avant-garde. The research for all of this was largely library- and archive-based, in libraries in Paris, New York and London. It is intended that the essay will further the overarching objective of the exhibition, which is to provoke a revised understanding of Cubism in Paris, challenging the predominance of a now-outdated and too-exclusive focus on 'gallery‘ Cubism (the Cubism of Picasso, Braque, and other artists of the 'stable‘ of gallerist Kahnweiler) with a presentation of the many different ideas that the 'salon‘ Cubist wing of the movement presented, in the work, among others, of Sonia and Robert Delaunay, Léger, Duchamp, Gleizes and Metzinger. Beyond this, it breaks important new ground in its characterisation of the avant-garde as an 'alternative profession‘ that challenged the liberal-bourgeois professionalism of the artistic mainstream.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Repenser le Monde |
| Editors | Christian Briend, Ariane Coulandre, Brigitte Leal |
| Place of Publication | Paris, France |
| Publisher | Centre Pompidou |
| Publication status | Submitted - Sept 2018 |
Bibliographical note
Impact: This is an invited essay for the catalogue of a major exhibition of Cubist art, to be held in the Centre Pompidou, Paris and the Kunstmuseum, Basel in the autumn of 2018 through the early Spring of 2019. It will be a major exhibition comprising over 250 works in 15 rooms, and with 7 catalogue essays. This is the first exhibition on Cubism in Paris for over 65 years, and the first ever to comprehend both 'wings‘ of the Cubist movement in Paris c1907-1918, that of 'salon‘ Cubism as well as 'gallery‘ Cubism.Keywords
- Art and design