Difference between revisions of "SIC"

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* [http://bluemountain.princeton.edu/bluemtn/cgi-bin/bluemtn?a=cl&cl=CL1&sp=bmtnaaz Scans in Blue Mountain Project]
 
* [http://bluemountain.princeton.edu/bluemtn/cgi-bin/bluemtn?a=cl&cl=CL1&sp=bmtnaaz Scans in Blue Mountain Project]
 
* [http://sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/dada/Sic/ Scans in International Dada Archive]
 
* [http://sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/dada/Sic/ Scans in International Dada Archive]
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==Literature==
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* Simon Dell, "After Apollinaire: ''SIC'' (1916-19), ''Nord-Sud'' (1917-18) and ''L'Esprit Nouveau'' (1920-5)", in ''The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines. Vol. 3: Europe 1880-1940'', Oxford University Press, 2013. [http://books.google.com/books?id=bvsfioiQ8k8C&pg=PA143]
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 13:25, 10 August 2014

SIC (Sons, Idées, Couleurs, Formes) was a magazine edited by Pierre Albert-Birot and published in 54 numbers (41 issues) between 1916 and 1919. The journal was a champion of Futurism and later, cubism. In May 1917 it declared "Futurism is not a school; it is a movement, a persuasion. It is the spirit of the advanced. It is the inexhaustible love of the new." Special issues focused on seminal events such as the premiere of Guillaume Apollinaire's play Mamelles de Tiresias. (Source)

Issues

Literature

  • Simon Dell, "After Apollinaire: SIC (1916-19), Nord-Sud (1917-18) and L'Esprit Nouveau (1920-5)", in The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines. Vol. 3: Europe 1880-1940, Oxford University Press, 2013. [1]

Links


Avant-garde and modernist magazines

Poesia (1905-09, 1920), Der Sturm (1910-32), Blast (1914-15), The Egoist (1914-19), The Little Review (1914-29), 291 (1915-16), MA (1916-25), De Stijl (1917-20, 1921-32), Dada (1917-21), Noi (1917-25), 391 (1917-24), Zenit (1921-26), Broom (1921-24), Veshch/Gegenstand/Objet (1922), Die Form (1922, 1925-35), Contimporanul (1922-32), Secession (1922-24), Klaxon (1922-23), Merz (1923-32), LEF (1923-25), G (1923-26), Irradiador (1923), Sovremennaya architektura (1926-30), Novyi LEF (1927-29), ReD (1927-31), Close Up (1927-33), transition (1927-38).