Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Todd Cronan’s juggernaut is several books in one. In the first place, it historicizes a crucial question in contemporary esthetics, whether or not a beholder’s experience of a work of art can properly be understood as affective rather than as cognitive. Second, it offers a strong rereading of various writings by Henri Bergson—whose philosophy has often been associated with the art of Matisse—with respect to that and related issues, showing in the end that although Bergson was continually tempted by the affective position, he never quite definitely succumbed to it. Third and most important, Cronan tracks the interplay between the affective and cognitivist viewpoints in the theory and practice of one of the great painters of the twentieth century, Henri Matisse; this sets Cronan on a collision course—from which he does not flinch —with the almost uniformly affective bias of recent Matisse criticism. Against Affective Formalism is a major achievement, and I look forward with fascination to its reception by a field that is likely to be transformed by it." —Michael Fried, Johns Hopkins University
"Matisse knows that sensations belong to - or alas have been detached from - particular human occasions, ways of being, forms of life. But the exacerbation of colour in Matisse speaks, dialectically, to the lack of particularity that makes us 'modern'. This to and fro of contraries is dealt with powerfully in a new book by Todd Cronan, Against Affective Formalism: Matisse, Bergson, Modernism. Colour, for Matisse - pure sensation, the stuff of the senses - will make, will be, a form of life. And at the same time it will enact the extremity - the uncanniness - of the wish."

- T. J. Clark, "The Urge to Strangle," The London Review of Books


Table of Contents


Contents


Acknowledgments

List of Illustrations

Introduction: Modernism against Representation


1. Painting as Affect Machine

2. Freedom and Memory: Bergson’s Theory of Hypnotic Agency

3. The Influence of Others: Matisse and Personnalité

4. Matisse and Mimesis

Conclusion. From Art to Object: The Case of Paul Valéry


Notes

Index



Against Affective Formalism Matisse Bergson

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A Paperback by Todd Cronan

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    View other formats and editions of Against Affective Formalism Matisse Bergson by Todd Cronan

    Publisher: MP - University Of Minnesota Press
    Publication Date: 4/1/2014 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780816676033, 978-0816676033
    ISBN10: 0816676038

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    "Todd Cronan’s juggernaut is several books in one. In the first place, it historicizes a crucial question in contemporary esthetics, whether or not a beholder’s experience of a work of art can properly be understood as affective rather than as cognitive. Second, it offers a strong rereading of various writings by Henri Bergson—whose philosophy has often been associated with the art of Matisse—with respect to that and related issues, showing in the end that although Bergson was continually tempted by the affective position, he never quite definitely succumbed to it. Third and most important, Cronan tracks the interplay between the affective and cognitivist viewpoints in the theory and practice of one of the great painters of the twentieth century, Henri Matisse; this sets Cronan on a collision course—from which he does not flinch —with the almost uniformly affective bias of recent Matisse criticism. Against Affective Formalism is a major achievement, and I look forward with fascination to its reception by a field that is likely to be transformed by it." —Michael Fried, Johns Hopkins University
    "Matisse knows that sensations belong to - or alas have been detached from - particular human occasions, ways of being, forms of life. But the exacerbation of colour in Matisse speaks, dialectically, to the lack of particularity that makes us 'modern'. This to and fro of contraries is dealt with powerfully in a new book by Todd Cronan, Against Affective Formalism: Matisse, Bergson, Modernism. Colour, for Matisse - pure sensation, the stuff of the senses - will make, will be, a form of life. And at the same time it will enact the extremity - the uncanniness - of the wish."

    - T. J. Clark, "The Urge to Strangle," The London Review of Books


    Table of Contents


    Contents


    Acknowledgments

    List of Illustrations

    Introduction: Modernism against Representation


    1. Painting as Affect Machine

    2. Freedom and Memory: Bergson’s Theory of Hypnotic Agency

    3. The Influence of Others: Matisse and Personnalité

    4. Matisse and Mimesis

    Conclusion. From Art to Object: The Case of Paul Valéry


    Notes

    Index



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