This week we venture into the Latin American avant garde with Vicente Huidobro’s Non Serviam. The first of several manifestos establishing the artist’s Creacionismo (Creationism), a novel approach to poetry that radically leaves behind all pretences to naturalism. Ostensibly written in 1916, Non Serviam, becomes popular in the Paris of the early 1920s when Huidobro meets Picasso, Ersnt, Gris, Reverdy, and Apollinaire among others. This is the first in a series of episodes on lesser known manifestos in the english speaking world.
Our intro music is by Aron Gyenge, whom we greatly thank.
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This week we venture into the Latin American avant garde with Vicente Huidobro’s Non Serviam. The first of several manifestos establishing the artist’s Creacionismo (Creationism), a novel approach to poetry that radically leaves behind all pretences to naturalism. Ostensibly written in 1916, Non Serviam, becomes popular in the Paris of the early 1920s when Huidobro meets Picasso, Ersnt, Gris, Reverdy, and Apollinaire among others. This is the first in a series of episodes on lesser known manifestos in the english speaking world.
Our intro music is by Aron Gyenge, whom we greatly thank.
Follow us on: Instagram @themanifestimagepodcast
And support us on: ko-fi.com/themanifestimage
This week we take a look at a selection of Maurice de Vlaminck’s work including a few of his remarks about the loose movement which would come to be known as Fauvism. Although a painter fiercely resistant towards the aesthetic authorities of the past, Vlaminck was influenced by contemporaries like Van Gogh, and engaged in a thriving artistic scene with his friend André Derain.
Images: https://www.wikiart.org/en/maurice-de-vlaminck/all-works#!#filterName:all-paintings-chronologically,resultType:masonry
Written Sources:
“The Preface Letter” Translation: Lucy R. Lippard from Lettres, poèmes et 16 reproductions des oeuvres du peintre (1923)
Concepts of Modern Art: From Fauvism to Postmodernism, Ed. Nick Stangos, chp. “Fauvism” by Sarah Whitfield (1994) Thames and Hudson, London.
Our intro music is by Aron Gyenge, whom we greatly thank.
Follow us on: Instagram @themanifestimagepodcast And support us on: ko-fi.com/themanifestimage
The Manifest Image
This week we venture into the Latin American avant garde with Vicente Huidobro’s Non Serviam. The first of several manifestos establishing the artist’s Creacionismo (Creationism), a novel approach to poetry that radically leaves behind all pretences to naturalism. Ostensibly written in 1916, Non Serviam, becomes popular in the Paris of the early 1920s when Huidobro meets Picasso, Ersnt, Gris, Reverdy, and Apollinaire among others. This is the first in a series of episodes on lesser known manifestos in the english speaking world.
Our intro music is by Aron Gyenge, whom we greatly thank.
Follow us on: Instagram @themanifestimagepodcast
And support us on: ko-fi.com/themanifestimage