«This book is about Modernism and Avant-Garde movements in Central
and Eastern European art around the last turn of the century. It
sketches a surrealistic, bewildering, irrational arena. At the same
time, we are offered a differentiated view on the complex whole of the
avantgarde scene in Eastern Europe. The author takes us to dark
soirées, scandalous dada theatrical performances, drunken bouts with
loudmouthed reformers. Subjectivity stands against rationality,
ethnonationalism against internationalism. Yugoslavian zenitism, Czech
poetism, Hungarian activism, and other less-known isms, are proposed
in exstatic outbursts in shortlived magazines. The pace is hectic, the
commitment enormous, and the sheer force of strongminded individuals
overwhelming. All in all, the inversed perspective seems alluringly
fresh, with Eastern Europe as the co-producer of ideological content,
instead as the receiver, or, even worse, the passive reflection of
Western thought. I am impressed by the tolerance of much of the
audience before and after the First World War: To be a genius seems to
be just a matter of course. Karel Teige in Prague, Ljubomir Micić in
Zagreb, Lajos Kassák in Budapest, and Jacek Malczewski in Krakow were
tireless propagators of avant-garde art – but also of nostalgic
messianism. How did they get away with this, at times, monomaniac
egoism, one wonders. Sandqvist finds the answer in that subjectivity
was the remedy for avantgarde artists as a defence mechanism against
the repressive society and destructive socioeconomical forces.» (Jan
von Bonsdorff, Professor, Uppsala University)
Les mer
The Europe that was Lost – Thoughts on Central and Eastern European Modernism
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783653024098
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Peter Lang
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter