Difference between revisions of "Poetism"

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(New page: The Poetist Manifesto was written by Karel Teige and Vítězslav Nezval in 1924. ; Summary of the Poetist Manifesto (From: Alfred French, The Poets of Prague, London, 1969 -- ...)
 
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The Poetist Manifesto was written by [[Karel Teige]] and [[Vítězslav Nezval]] in [[1924]].
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; Summary of the Poetist Manifesto
 
(From: Alfred French, The Poets of Prague, London, 1969 -- an excellent, and the only,
 
book about Poetism in English)
 
"...in Teige's view the noblest expression of modern art was to be found not in cathedrals
 
or galleries but in the functional products of technical civilization. The art of tomorrow,
 
as already demonstrated by the architecture of today, would shun romanticism and
 
decoration, and its spirit would be akin to that of geometry or science. But though the
 
new living style was to be, at its best, severely logical, it must also cater for the irrational
 
side of man, that side of him which hungered for the bizarre, the fantastic, and the absurd.
 
For six days would man be rational, but on the seventh would he rest from reason. This
 
recreation, or social hygiene, as Teige regarded it, was the function of Poetism, which
 
thereby supplemented Constructivism, being itself its opposite face.
 
Poetism was not itself art, but a style of living, an attitude, and a form of behaviour. It
 
was favourable to the growth of an art which was playful, unheroic, unphilosophical,
 
mischievous, and fantastic: it throve in an atmosphere of gaiety and fun, and aimed to
 
draw the attention of its audience from the gloom of factory and tenement to the bright
 
lights of man-made amusement. 'Poetism seeks to turn life into a magnificent
 
entertainment, an eccentric carnival, a harlequinade of feeling and imagination, an
 
intoxicating film track, a marvellous kaleidoscope. Its muses are kindly, gentle and
 
smiling, its glances are as fascinating and inscrutable as the glance of lovers.' " [http://www.perdigiorno.net/manifesto/poetistmanifesto1924.pdf]
 

Latest revision as of 10:13, 22 August 2014

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