Description

Book Synopsis
Marx’s ideas are now subject to worldwide reappraisal, with conferences attracting the most important critical thinkers on the left. Marx and the Aesthetic (Amsterdam, 2012) reappraised Marx in the context of his own creative inspirations and contemporary art today. Max Raphael’s Proudhon, Marx, Picasso (1933), published in Paris by the exiled German art historian, a contemporary of Walter Benjamin, included the first attempt at a Marxist critique of Picasso. His book appeared when the global crisis of capitalism coincided with the birth of fascism. Picasso/Marx looks backwards and perhaps forwards, resituating Picasso in dialectical terms. His context as player in the little-known Communist West, centred on Paris, brings into play the Marxist theory of his times. From the 1930s to the 1970s, Marx, Lenin and Stalin’s own theories on art and literature were discussed together with Plekhanov, Bogdanov and Zhdanov. John Berger’s Success and Failure of Picasso (1965), dedicated to Raphael, offered a critique of Picasso’s art and Communist politics within the lifetime of the painter. Picasso/Marx presents a critical view of Picasso to his new audiences from Melbourne to Moscow.

Trade Review
Reviews 'Long awaited by scholars, this is a work of astonishing verve and scope by unquestionably the leading authority on left-wing artistic movements of the period.'
Michael Kelly

Table of Contents
  • Introduction
  • Picasso to Marx
  • Popular Front
  • Paris World Fair
  • Holocaust
  • Atomic Age
  • Colonialism
  • Portraits
  • Conclusion
  • Postface
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Picasso / Marx: and Socialist Realism in France

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    A Paperback / softback by Sarah Wilson

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      View other formats and editions of Picasso / Marx: and Socialist Realism in France by Sarah Wilson

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 23/04/2015
      ISBN13: 9781781381922, 978-1781381922
      ISBN10: 1781381925

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Marx’s ideas are now subject to worldwide reappraisal, with conferences attracting the most important critical thinkers on the left. Marx and the Aesthetic (Amsterdam, 2012) reappraised Marx in the context of his own creative inspirations and contemporary art today. Max Raphael’s Proudhon, Marx, Picasso (1933), published in Paris by the exiled German art historian, a contemporary of Walter Benjamin, included the first attempt at a Marxist critique of Picasso. His book appeared when the global crisis of capitalism coincided with the birth of fascism. Picasso/Marx looks backwards and perhaps forwards, resituating Picasso in dialectical terms. His context as player in the little-known Communist West, centred on Paris, brings into play the Marxist theory of his times. From the 1930s to the 1970s, Marx, Lenin and Stalin’s own theories on art and literature were discussed together with Plekhanov, Bogdanov and Zhdanov. John Berger’s Success and Failure of Picasso (1965), dedicated to Raphael, offered a critique of Picasso’s art and Communist politics within the lifetime of the painter. Picasso/Marx presents a critical view of Picasso to his new audiences from Melbourne to Moscow.

      Trade Review
      Reviews 'Long awaited by scholars, this is a work of astonishing verve and scope by unquestionably the leading authority on left-wing artistic movements of the period.'
      Michael Kelly

      Table of Contents
      • Introduction
      • Picasso to Marx
      • Popular Front
      • Paris World Fair
      • Holocaust
      • Atomic Age
      • Colonialism
      • Portraits
      • Conclusion
      • Postface
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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