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MODERNISM in art and literature

Published on Nov 20, 2015

A visual presentation to introduce British Modernism

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

MODERNISM

1910 - 1939
Photo by Edgar Barany

Modernism

  • began in Europe
  • around 1910
  • and flourished in the 1920s and 1930s
  • (Robert Kohl, Street Scene, 1930)
Photo by RMH40

Famous Modernists

in Literature
Photo by pedrosimoes7

James Joyce

Dublin 1882 - 1941

Virginia Woolf

London 1882 - 1941

Franz Kafka

Prague 1883 - 1924

Robert Musil

Klagenfurt 1880 - 1942
Photo by Père Ubu

Marcel Proust

Paris 1871 - 1922

T.S. Elliot

St Louis 1888 - 1965

W.B. Yeats

Dublin 1865 - 1939

Modern art replaced classical art

  • It included Abstract art, Cubism, Pop art, Minimalism, and Dadaism.
  • It affected sculptors like Rodin and later Henry Moore

Some famous Modernists

in VISUAL ARTS
Modernist painter surrounded by people
Photo by Cea.

Pablo Picasso

Les Demoiselles d'Avignon - 1907

Georges Braque

Viaduct at l'Estaque - 1908
Photo by profzucker

Henri Matisse

Tea - 1919
Photo by rocor

Vassily Kandinsky

Composition VII - 1913

Piet Mondriaan

Grundfarben - 1926

Edvard Munch

Der Schrei der Natur - 1893

Gustav Klimt

Der Kuss - 1908-9

Alphons Mucha

Ivancice 1860 - 1939

Some famous Modernists

in MUSIC

Igor Stravinsky

The premiere in Paris of his ballets The Firebird and The Rite of Spring provoked scandal

Arnold Schönberg

Vienna 1874 - Los Angeles 1951
Photo by iClassicalCom

All modernists had in common the same desire

Photo by arnoKath

... make a clear break with the traditions that came before them.

Photo by jordicerda52

Modernist writers
attempted to…

Photo by St0rmz

Recover the unique experience of the individual

Queen Victoria

died in 1901 - Decline of British Empire

The system of moral values which dominated the Victorian Age collapsed

Traditional forms are rejected in favour of…

A direct attempt to represent the workings of the mind and the unconscious

The Modernist work typically presents…

Braque - L'Oliveraie 1907
Photo by Cea.

Reality as...

  • fragmentary
  • and relative

The Modernist work typically favours the…

Photo by C Leavitt

Subjective perception of the real world

Matisse - Large Red Interior Devolved
Photo by pcurto

Pablo Picasso

Guernica - 1937

The idea that there is only one truth is…

Photo by EJP Photo

is rejected!

Human identity is manifold.

Theory of Relativity

Equation E= mc2 - 1905

In terms of
form and style, Modernist novels...

Braque
Photo by rocor

broke with most of the conventions of
Victorian fiction

Modernism was deeply influenced by the new psychological theories:

Sigmund Freud

Vienna 1856 - London 1939

Henri Bergson

1859 - 1941

William James

1842 - 1910

Freud suggested

that:

Man organises the information he receives from the outside world to his own interior experience and desires

According to Freud:

  • man’s perception of reality is fundamentally subjective

Bergson argued that:

  • time cannot be measured according to units (such as hours, minutes, etc.)
Photo by Mylla

Time is:

  • a flow
  • a duration
  • not a series of points
Photo by Gabriel Sanz

Instead of perceiving time as linear, we experience….

  • a mixture of past – present – future within the same moment

William James

  • employed the term "Consciousness" to define...
Photo by Ralph Buckley

The whole range of an individual’s mental activity
including pre-speech levels of consciousness and awareness

The term “Stream of Consciousness”

  • ... was first coined by the American psychologist W. James

According to W. James:

  • Human thoughts and memories are not “chopped up in bits” ...
Photo by jurvetson

... they are something fluid which flows like a stream

Many Modernist novels no longer followed …

  • a linear plot or
  • a chronological sequence of events
Photo by Werner Kunz

The idea of progress which laid behind the novel’s linear plot structure …

Photo by StaneStane

...gave way to the idea of duration

Thus a Modernist novel

  • ...
  • ... can be set in one single day
Photo by 96dpi

The analysis of a single moment

  • can tell us more about a character than a traditional life-story
Photo by Lord Mariser

The figure of the omniscient narrator as a moral guide is replaced by...

the direct or indirect presentation of characters’ thoughts, feelings and memories

Photo by Chapendra

The two novelists who were...

  • most interested in representing their characters' inner processes of memory and thought were:
Virginia Woolf - Through the lookingg glass

James Joyce
Virginia Woolf

Photo by kevin dooley

The techniques they used were partly different …

  • Joyce increasingly tried to eliminate the narrator by using the so-called “direct interior monologue”

Virginia Woolf used:

  • the “indirect interior monologue” resorting sometimes to an unobstrusive 3rd-person narrator”

The interior monologues can be …

  • Direct or
  • Indirect
Photo by frizzetta

The direct interior monologue refers to …

  • the presentation of a character’s stream of consciousness without the guiding presence of a narrator

The indirect interior monologue refers to …

  • the indirect presentation of a character’s stream of consciousness filtered by the voice of an anonymous 3rd-person narrator
Photo by matthewtlynch

Modernism was …

  • not accessible to all
  • only for a highly educated elite
Gaudì dreams in La Sagrada Familia
Photo by jurvetson

Modernism often implied also …

  • A vein of pretension of seriousness, which was contrary to the comic tradition and spirit of the English novel
Epstein's Eliot
Photo by dannybirchall

T.S. Eliot's Wasteland

is a prime example of modernism in poetry
Photo by Vermin Inc

Ezra Pound

contributed to early Modernism and Imagism

Despite modernist innovations …

  • Conventional novels continued to be written in this period...
Photo by guldfisken

The realist novel continued

also in the form of Dystopia
Photo by ginnerobot

George Orwell

Nineteen Eighty-four - Animal Farm

Aldous Huxley

Brave New World

Detective Stories

and Science Fiction
Photo by ginnerobot

Arthur Conan Doyle

Sherlock Holmes

Agatha Christie

Murder on the Orient Express
Photo by kathrynlinge

H.G. Wells

The Time Machine - The Invisible Man

Time for reading !

By Anna Laghigna

Credits

  • All pictures licensed under Creative Commons or Public Domain
  • Attribution via Flickr, Wikipedia or Wikimedia Commons.
Photo by dommend