Henry M. Sayre: The Object of Performance: The American Avant-Garde since 1970 (1989)
Filed under book | Tags: · art history, avant-garde, dance, feminism, land art, performance, performance art, photography

Looks at the development of American avant-garde art. Considers feminist performance, particularly by Laurie Anderson, Eleanor Antin, and Carolee Schneemann; dance and collaboration as a new form of Gesamtkunstwerk; poets of the vernacular landscape and the postmodern sublime; and the application of Roland Barthes’s theories to Sayre’s own concepts of the relationship between photography and live art (ch 7).
Publisher University of Chicago Press, 1989
ISBN 0226735575, 9780226735573
xvi+308 pages
Reviews: Roger F. Malina (Leonardo, 1992), George J. Leonard (LA Times, 1989).
PDF (93 MB, no OCR)
Comment (0)Theories of Modern Art: A Source Book by Artists and Critics (1968)
Filed under book | Tags: · art criticism, art history, art theory, avant-garde, constructivism, cubism, dada, expressionism, fauvism, futurism, neoplasticism, post-impressionism, surrealism, symbolism

“A collection of texts from letters, manifestos, notes and interviews. Sources include, as the title says, artists and critics—some expected, like van Gogh, Gauguin, Apollinaire, Mondrian, Greenberg, just to name a few—and some less so: Trotsky and Hitler, in the section on Art and Politics. The book is a wonderful resource and insight into the way artists think and work.”
Edited by Herschel Browning Chipp
Contributions by Peter Selz and Joshua C. Taylor
Publisher University of California Press, 1968
ISBN 0520014502
xv+664 pages
Reviews: Romare H. Bearden and Carl Holty (Leonardo, 1970), Elizabeth Gilmore Holt (Art Bulletin, 1972).
PDF (179 MB, no OCR)
Comment (0)Hugo Ball: Flight Out of Time: A Dada Diary (1927–)
Filed under book | Tags: · art, art criticism, avant-garde, biography, dada

“Hugo Ball—poet, philosopher, novelist, cabaret performer, journalist, mystic—was a man extremely sensitive to the currents of his time and carried in their wake. In February 1916 he founded the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich. The sound poems and performance art by Ball and the other artists who gathered there were the beginnings of Dada. Ball’s extraordinary diaries, one of the most significant products of the Dada movement, are here available in English, along with the original Dada manifesto and John Elderfield’s critical introduction, revised and updated for this edition, and a supplementary bibliography of Dada texts.”
First published as Die Flucht aus der Zeit, Duncker & Humblot, Munich, 1927.
Edited and with an Introduction by John Elderfield
Translated by Ann Raimes
Publisher Viking Press, New York, 1974
Documents of Twentieth-Century Art series
New edition, University of California Press, 1996
ISBN 9780520204409
lxiv+274 pages
Review: Kirkus Rev (n.d.).
PDF (19 MB, updated on 2020-2-27)
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