Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781538147092 Academic Inspection Copy

Red Aesthetics

Rodchenko, Brecht, Eisenstein
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Google
Preview
"WHAT'S NEEDED-IS NO REST," Aleksandr Rodchenko declared in the "Manifesto of the Constructivist Group." We must "go out into all kinds of production anywhere where there is an artistic need." This book is a synthesis of Rodchenko, Brecht and Eisenstein. Amongst the most influential artists of the interwar period, and among the most influential political artists of the century, between them they tried to develop a socialist theory of art, and a red aesthetic centered around removing barriers to 'production'. The book is an urgently needed intervention into mainstream interpretations of political art in the twentieth century - and therefore, into the understanding of the relationship between aesthetics and politics. Working in different media-sculpture, posters, photography (Rodchenko), theater (Brecht) and film (Eisenstein)-and in different but often overlapping geographical contexts-Russia, Germany and in Hollywood-they shared a vision of artistic will as the defining quality of leftist art in an age defined by political extremism. This is a deeply controversial and deeply convincing set of arguments, that go right to the heart of contemporary philosophical debates about the relation between aesthetics and politics.
Todd Cronan is associate professor of Art History at Emory University.
Introduction: An Exact Picture of the World Chapter 1: The Great Production: Rodchenko/Brecht/Eisenstein with and against Adorno and Barthes Chapter 2: Rodchenko's Photographic Communism Chapter 3: Art and Political Consequence: Brecht's Critique of Affect Chapter 4: Seeing Differently and Seeing Correctly: Brecht on Artistic and Political Abstraction Chapter 5: Class into Race: Brecht, Adorno, and the Problem of State Capitalism Chapter 6: Relentlessness: Eisenstein's Automatic Writing
Google Preview content