Irrational Modernism

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Irrational Modernism

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In `Irrational Modernism’ Amelia Jones gives us a history of New York Dada, reinterpreted in relation to the life and works of Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven. Jones enlarges our conception of New York Dada beyond the male avant-garde heroes of Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray, and Francis Picabia to include the rebellious body of the Baroness. If they practised Dada, she lived it, with her unorthodox personal life, wild assemblage objects, radical poetry and prose, and the flamboyant self-displays by which she became her own work of art. Through this reinterpretation, Jones not only provides a revisionist history of an art movement but also suggests a new method of art history. Baroness Elsa, whose appearances in Jones’s narrative of New York Dada mirror her volcanic intrusions into the artistic circles of the time, can be seen to embody a new way to understand the history of avant-gardism – one that embraces the irrational and marginal rather than promoting the canonical.Acknowledging her identification with the Baroness (as a “fellow neurasthenic”), and interrupting her own objective passages of art historical argument with what she describes in her introduction as “bursts of irrationality,” Jones explores the interestedness of all art history, and proposes a new “immersive” understanding of history (reflecting the historian’s own history) that parallels the irrational immersive trajectory of avant-gardism as practised by Baroness Elsa.

SKU: 20868 Category: Tag:
Subtitle: A Neurasthenic History of New York Dada
Author: Jones, Amelia
Year: 2005
ISBN: 9780262600668
Pages: 334
Language: English
Publisher: MIT Press
Publisher's city: Cambridge
Publication date:
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