This genre intersects the literary avant-garde, visual and concrete poetry, text-based installations, net art, software art, and netspeak. |
|
The post-modernist movement challenged the Modernist notion of the avant-garde. |
|
They were a remarkable couple, forward-thinking patrons of the arts who throughout their lives supported the avant-garde in art and architecture. |
|
With modernism and the avant-garde, postmodernists reject realism, mimesis, and linear forms of narrative. |
|
He is maybe a bit like the great Serge Gainsbourg, who was also mixing pop music and the avant-garde. |
|
The re-emergence of the avant-garde, modernism's trope par excellence, marks the return of the repressed in contemporary art. |
|
I will inaugurate this study with a broad introduction to avant-garde film practice. |
|
In the war the surrealists had been exiled to Manhattan and brought with them an idea of avant-garde cinema. |
|
It could be 1961, or 1949, with the avant-garde wearing berets and reciting poetry. |
|
The earlier film culture manifested a proximity to the avant-garde, the rebel. |
|
But then, my project has always been to bring the smells of the barbeque to the world of the avant-garde. |
|
The film is about an avant-garde composer in the last century, and as you might expect, it's filled with his music. |
|
Early non-medical LSD use was limited to an intellectual avant-garde of writers, artists and musicians. |
|
To innovate, the avant-garde needed to push film out of the black box, the darkened theatre, into the white cube of the gallery space. |
|
This ethics of language, so central to Barthes's promotion of the avant-garde, may help to account for a puzzling feature of his criticism. |
|
The Soviet avant-garde experimented with photography, photomontage, film, architecture and design for everyday living. |
|
These were based on texts by Prevert, Schwitters and Artaud, all artists of the modernist avant-garde. |
|
Khardzhiev's seemingly unassailable authority stemmed, of course, from his personal knowledge of many of the key figures of the avant-garde. |
|
Composers, editors, directors and writers, anyone who was respected in the avant-garde of the Hurrion arts seemed in attendance. |
|
Konig spent much of the 1970s in North America, where he established close ties with the leading artists of the avant-garde. |
|
|
And yet, this manages not to come across as math, and only barely sounds like an avant-garde experiment. |
|
He is a London-based independent curator of experimental, avant-garde, and artists' film and video. |
|
There's so much great music in the world, from jazz, to Mozart, to rock, to French Impressionism, to folk music, the avant-garde, etc. |
|
After the second world war, the gap between audiences and avant-garde composers opened into an unbridgeable abyss. |
|
Ives may have sympathised with progressive ideas and there are occasional glimpses of the avant-garde in the Art Palace selection. |
|
Or one can question whether the cool, objectivizing aesthetic of the avant-garde ever really was. |
|
For all its pretensions towards reinvention, Glasgow remained deeply suspicious of the avant-garde. |
|
At that time at Olympic, I was doing avant-garde jazz, experimenting, trying all of these different things. |
|
Experimentation, the avant-garde, suddenly becomes something barbarous and ineffective. |
|
I got into medieval music and the avant-garde, all the fringe stuff that people didn't like, the punk rock of classical music. |
|
Even during the brief periods of thaw there was little space for innovation, critique, or the avant-garde. |
|
There is a lot of Chinese contemporary art and avant-garde art but I think China is much more daring. |
|
The theater has a reputation for producing experimental, avant-garde plays, many of them controversial. |
|
I don't know what it all means, but this hyperkinetic mishmash of action and avant-garde left me reeling. |
|
From the refined attire at Lincoln Center to the avant-garde dress downtown, we spotted many of the big 2014 trends. |
|
She veers towards the avant-garde, using metal-powder deformed silicone piercings as textural embellishment and digital printers. |
|
It was definitely the heart of not just the American avant-garde but the leading edge of all Western art. |
|
According to Pozdorovkin, they all shared a love of punk rock and avant-garde art. |
|
The time has come to think beyond the divides of Pop and Minimalism, of Dada and abstraction, and of avant-garde and modernism. |
|
It's macho enough, and he would probably think it was quite avant-garde in its way. |
|
|
It was the innocence and charm of his work that won him the admiration of the avant-garde. |
|
With this kaleidoscopically inventive production Chichester, once the home of safe theatre, becomes a leader of the avant-garde. |
|
One represents the aestheticism of the academy, the other the avant-garde faith in innovation and progression. |
|
Reality shows take the pressure off producers to produce high-class intelligent drama, or comedy, or something avant-garde and out there. |
|
One reason that avant-garde film wasn't reviewed in newspapers during my time as a critic had to do with the avant-garde film world. |
|
He was also, in his time, a superb ringmaster of French culture and the avant-garde. |
|
Was it this, the sense of art as supreme sacrifice, which appealed so strongly to Western romanticism and the avant-garde? |
|
French label Burning Emptiness stand alone at the vanguard of anything and everything lo-fi, avant-garde, techno, or just plain and simple noise. |
|
Once seen as avant-garde, these thirtysomethings are now at the core of the modern art world. |
|
When the lectures were first delivered, Bernstein's rejection of atonal music deeply offended many avant-garde composers. |
|
He quotes Adorno in the essay, and like Adorno, he plays it safe by attaching himself to the contemporary establishment avant-garde. |
|
The city has a reputation for being the one place where rock music and the avant-garde have merged with results that are spectacular rather than excruciating. |
|
It is set at the intersections of the literary avant-garde, visual and concrete poetry, text-based electronic installation art, net art and software art. |
|
Some products of the avant-garde keep their edge longer than others-Joyce, Picasso and Schonberg still have the capacity to shock after nearly a century. |
|
The most prestigious traditional Bohemian glass decoration, Tiefschnit, or deep, intaglio carving, was also adopted by the artists of the avant-garde. |
|
Modotti, a famous beauty of Italian birth, was the colleague and muse of photographer Edward Weston, who took her to Mexico to mix with the avant-garde. |
|
Chen, 30, set aside his strict classical training, based on techniques developed as far back as the Tang dynasty, and moved into the realm of the avant-garde. |
|
In the early Sixties she was still in the avant-garde, having abandoned St. Tropez to follow a guru to California, where she changed her name to Jane. |
|
April will see another French classic, Jacques Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann, in a more avant-garde production with eccentric sets and costumes supplied by Portland Opera. |
|
Christopher's ballets demonstrate a strong musicality and romanticism, which the choreographer says sets him apart from his more avant-garde contemporaries. |
|
|
The late avant-garde composer John Cage is in the news again. |
|
The exhibition was extraordinary for its size and status as a landmark in the context of introducing European avant-garde art to the United States. |
|
Unlike most avant-garde composers from the fifties, Boulez has always found the physical act of making music a pleasurable exercise for both the ears and the spirit. |
|
The rather scattered approach turns what could have been a compelling, avant-garde look into the ideas of a great thinker into a rather uneven experience. |
|
This is coupled with an absence of widely available introductions and open doors for those who are unfamiliar with contemporary or avant-garde poetry. |
|
Artists here have been diligently working to improve their skills, as their counterparts in Beijing continue to put forward new concepts and avant-garde ideas. |
|
Modernism, avant-garde, and neoclassicism, flourished in opposition to the so-called proletarian literature. |
|
They represent the avant-garde neoclassicism of Paris in the 1770s when Alexander Stroganoff was forming his collection. |
|
The festival, an annual summer event, bravely keeps asserting the existence of an avant-garde. |
|
Such tactics merely disguise the fact that the avant-garde of the art world has been peddling more or less the same idea for over eighty years. |
|
The designs fit well into avant-garde housing warehouse conversion lofts and innovative new build. |
|
The rooms are spacious and avant-garde in decor and the service discreet but attentive. |
|
The second fact Ducan misses is that many innovative poets partake of a range of literary and non-literary avant-garde practices. |
|
Their style of painting, using non-naturalistic colors, was one of the first avant-garde developments in European art. |
|
It was a ruthless bid for mainstream success, yet he emerged without a stain on his avant-garde credentials. |
|
Every culture has its avant-garde, and every avant-garde has its own occult language. |
|
I'm not a particular fan of outlandish avant-garde food, but this selection was too limited even for an old stick-in-the-mud like me. |
|
More power to the members often means, quite simply, more power to the opinionated and the avant-garde. |
|
The avant-garde is to be understood neither as simply oppositional to dominant ideological structures nor as naively collusive with them. |
|
In Europe he found his instinctive style was part of a tradition that stretched from cave painting to the avant-garde. |
|
|
His work fuses elements of American structuralism, the narrative avant-garde and experimental documentary. |
|
This transition from home to the centre of the avant-garde is omnipresent in her painting style. |
|
Ross's Maoist back-to-nature fantasies were hitched to theories filched from the 1960s architectural avant-garde. |
|
By the early 1920s, both avant-garde and classicizing French architects endorsed the idea of a regulating structure for architecture and design. |
|
Clearly this satirical tale of the beautiful people who orbit an enigmatic film producer has its avant-garde checklist down pat. |
|
The album is based around beautiful hypnotic drones, kind of avant-garde and kind of calming at the same time. |
|
Clubbiness and nostalgia have sunk the avant-garde as surely as bad writing and self-indulgence. |
|
Considering your lengthy immersion in classical music, what propelled you into avant-garde performance? |
|
Much avant-garde music proved too difficult for amateurs and seemed at first inaccessible. |
|
He then fast-forwards to the present when a new poetics reclaims the impulse of the earlier avant-garde. |
|
In the second period, Balada's music was very abstract and dramatic, without melodic inflection and with a heavy reliance on avant-garde effects. |
|
Many avant-garde filmmakers had migrated from the plastic arts, and through their careers continued parallel projects in multiple mediums. |
|
Their great finesse and qualities of ensemble were displayed in works ranging from Elizabethan consort music to the Hungarian avant-garde. |
|
That very internationalism goes some way towards explaining the endurance of this genre of avant-garde art. |
|
The parallels to contemporaneous avant-garde film-makers and artists is striking. |
|
French-born Ingres had a major impact on Matisse, the post-Impressionists and early 20th century avant-garde artists. |
|
The paradoxes involved in the notion of an avant-garde tradition are foundational to any attempt to teach experimental writing. |
|
Avoiding the influence of Picasso's cubism in any form, O'Keeffe epitomized the independence of the American avant-garde. |
|
Burger used the term avant-garde only in reference to Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism. |
|
The spirit of Dada and the other avant-garde art movements was forged in the trenches of World War One. |
|
|
From the earliest days of Dada, Duchamp's iconoclastic vision had been at the forefront of the avant-garde. |
|
This is prog that nods to the past instrumentally but takes on the attitude of modern avant-garde acts like Boris in the process. |
|
Casual wear, evening dresses, classical gowns and avant-garde bra-style tops are all denim. |
|
Needless to say, it's a far more easily digestible morsel of math-rock, not wearing its avant-garde badge as a source of pride. |
|
There was a time when those young designers wallowed in grunge and everything was mad avant-garde. |
|
This book's hours with the poets offer not so much the aesthetics of the avant-garde as those of the guard's van. |
|
She works as a docent at the Art Car Museum, an avant-garde gallery in Houston. |
|
There was no avant-garde art any more, there was no more experimental drama any more. |
|
I also recommend the disc for those who love avant-garde, experimental filmmaking. |
|
By the mid '70s, most of these regional experimentalists had relocated to New York and were dominating the avant-garde jazz scene. |
|
Is it an earnest appreciation of the avant-garde or just eyeballing a freak show? |
|
Whether it is funky or elegantly dreamy, avant-garde designs and expressive concepts in eyewear continue to attract modern men and women. |
|
These musicians play to an avant-garde, hardcore underground sound. |
|
The results included muddled avant-garde theatrical staging techniques and insensitive and maladroit portraits of African Americans. |
|
In its writhing poses, the Massacre, in particular, stands out as testament to Bonifacio's avant-garde enthusiasm for Mannerism. |
|
He called for a revolt against art about art and theory-laden avant-garde styles. |
|
The simultaneous testing of avant-garde and materialist outlooks yielded equivocal results. |
|
It marks the coming together of an increasingly internationally minded avant-garde theatre scene. |
|
We should also mention that the gallery has set up some speakers in the gallery playing tinkly avant-garde piano music. |
|
This show made it clear that before he became a titan of avant-garde theater, Beck was a painter of force and poetic invention. |
|
|
Cartier commissioned avant-garde Italian architect Ettore Sottsass to curate the exhibit and design the showcases. |
|
These included many associated with the modernist avant-garde, who worked in a variety of media. |
|
They might think it sounds horribly self-important, turgid, avant-garde and inaccessible. |
|
Recent trips to Europe have turned them on to how avant-garde what they're doing is. |
|
But it's not unapproachably avant-garde, either, for all the fearsome credibility of many of her new accomplices. |
|
He was just as into the avant-garde, but he was exploring it rather than mouthing off about it. |
|
Or why is it easier for avant-garde composer Luciano Berio to make money reorchestrating a duet from Puccini's Turandot than from his own creations? |
|
Waterford's new exciting theatre company combines a mixture of traditional, avant-garde and street influences to create a visually and cerebrally entertaining performance. |
|
Numerous art historians responded to Hockney's proposal with suspicious stupefaction, as if this avant-garde upstart were accusing the old masters of painting by numbers. |
|
He has applied this avant-garde sensibility to an exploration of social and political issues, giving his experimental forms the unadorned flatness of naturalist filmmaking. |
|
The avant-garde Leftists also found something sinisterly consoling in representational realism, which reassures us with images of a world we feel at home with. |
|
Today the concept of a pedestrian-friendly, densely built community of wood-frame cottages with front porches and picket fences hardly seems avant-garde. |
|
The lights focus in on the stage to highlight the sinuous muscles of the three men rising and turning in an avant-garde mix of movement over break beat. |
|
Belgian influences, on the other had, are confined to a couple of avant-garde fashion designers and a few chichi restaurants in New York, so this is likely to remain a fad. |
|
The idea was to synthesise the avant-garde cubist vision of modernity with the high forms of opera and ballet that still dominated French bourgeois taste. |
|
Every ambitious 19th-century show, especially in the area of Impessionism and post-Impressionism, has been obliged to borrow from this fabulous trove of avant-garde painting. |
|
Web sites have taken on the historical roles and research value of samizdat, avant-garde magazines, seditious literature, fringe political manifesti, etc. |
|
Independent and entrepreneurial, coworkers are essentially pioneering an entirely new way of working that conventional businesses often interpret as avant-garde. |
|
Still, the film is a startling document for its time, and in its crazy quilt of themes could be screened credibly in a festival of avant-garde films. |
|
It was no wonder that the avant-garde artists and the printmakers who were rejected by the conservative Bunten, Teiten and Inten, tried to organize their own exhibitions. |
|
|
Elements of surrealism and cubism, influences of the European avant-garde art movements of high modernism are all in evidence in this striking poem. |
|
It wasn't especially avant-garde, per se, but it demonstrated her ability to take a simple design and make it all the more special without vulgarizing the base design vision. |
|
He was known internationally for organizing numerous influential traveling exhibitions and for introducing to the mainstream many key avant-garde artists. |
|
This is extremely four-square stuff, even by the standards of an artist never renowned for pushing back the frontiers of avant-garde sonic exploration. |
|
Instead, you find your favorite objects displaced by a cacophony of contemporary works, often highly avant-garde and challenging. |
|
After steeping in this environment for a year, Sontag became the high priestess of French avant-garde culture. |
|
My poetic revelation occurred in the last stages of modernism, when the various schools of the avant-garde were beginning to appear in Latin America. |
|
And this imbues Europeans with a sense of moral superiority, meaning that we the Europeans are the moral avant-garde. |
|
Influenced by the avant-garde jewellery art scene in Germany, her designs go beyond functional accessory into the realm of individual self-expression. |
|
Because of its physicality, it has a tactility and availability that the light in Cubism and Futurism, which strongly influenced the Russian avant-garde, rarely if ever has. |
|
His guitar playing was always the right side of avant-garde and here it shines amidst arrangements that bounce between psychedelic rock and Argentinian ambience. |
|
The constant punning and allusions through sampling naturally makes them literate in the most unpretentious manner I have heard and seen out of a group so avant-garde. |
|
His response, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, was a series of pieces that broke the mould of the serialism that was then the lingua franca of the avant-garde. |
|
Claiming to have been hugely into minimalism and avant-garde music by the time he hit high school, Jim O'Rourke's stock took a blow in the credibility department with me. |
|
Cariaga's innovative language-oriented poetry challenges the assumption that avant-garde poetics is the privileged terrain of white heterosexual male poets. |
|
It also contains his polemic with the avant-garde cult of metaphors as well as with postromantic poeticalness and easy melodiousness. |
|
It was a meeting of the blues, stride piano, hot, swing, bebop, and the free jazz avant-garde reservation music that William Parker is producing. |
|
This avant-garde contained the spores of what later would be termed abstractionism, surrealism, and imagism. |
|
The avant-garde was influenced by German expressionism and Sell points to Max Beckmann, Ernst Toller, and Nolde. |
|
Some avant-garde composers request that performers detune their instruments before playing. |
|
|
Although the avant-garde often dismissed his works as pastiche echoing every late 20th-century tonalist, Maw persisted. |
|
His ideas were popular with the Russian Cosmist movement, and influenced the 20th-century avant-garde. |
|
The composer, conductor and pianist Miroslav Ponc is a little explored and thus overlooked figure of the Czech interwar avant-garde. |
|
We were also reacting against the pyrotechnics of avant-garde theater and the brutism of performance art. |
|
This considerably affected his articles, several of which were literarily avant-garde in their own right, and also influenced his own literary writing. |
|
Furthermore, as the hang in the opening room of the Roubaix display suggested, his initial foray into avant-garde territory was a deliberate choice. |
|
At other times, some readers may see a posed exoticism, particularly in photographs of nude women with such hoary avant-garde props as body paint and animal skulls. |
|
The difficulty with avant-garde writers of any generation is that to succeeding generations they can appear rather stilted, self-conscious poseurs or just silly. |
|
The second project will debut early winter 2016, as sbe's popular and beloved nightlife venue, Greystone Manor, is reimagined as an avant-garde cortile. |
|
A teacher, writer and passionate student of art history as well as an artist, Abdalla's avant-garde experimentalism earned him recognition within his lifetime. |
|
Marclay pioneered the art of turntablism in the seventies, and has worked with avant-garde musicians such as John Zorn, Elliot Sharp, and Yoshihide Otomo. |
|
Never lapsing into mere pastiche, Tin Hat Trio fuses the structural incisiveness of classical with the sensual fluidity of jazz, offset by probing, avant-garde atonalities. |
|