Lecture 12: War and peace – the proliferation of abstraction in a time of conflict
Theo van Doesburg, Kurt Schwitters, 'Kleine Dada Soirée', 1922, lithographic poster/program, printed in red and black on wove paper, 30.16 x 30.16 cm.
If you missed Lecture 12: War and peace – the proliferation of abstraction in a time of conflict from Terence Maloon’s series The 50 years that changed painting 1867–1917, you can watch the recorded version below or on our Youtube channel.
Lecture 12: War and peace – the proliferation of abstraction in a time of conflict
In August 1914, when war broke out in Europe, some artists were caught unawares vacationing abroad and found themselves unable to return home. Others were declared enemy aliens and deported to their native countries. The disruption caused by the war reconfigured artists’ communities into new associations, some of which became very consequential. In Switzerland, the Dada group consisted of a rag-tag gathering of exiles and conscientious objectors; in Holland a group of painters, architects and designers interested in the possibilities of abstract art amalgamated to call themselves De Stijl; while in Russia a turbulent avant-garde mirrored the revolutionary ferment. Was there a connection – was there some underlying cause or effect – linking the cataclysm of war to the great crack-up transforming the world of art? Artists of the time had their views on the matter.
The Drill Hall Gallery acknowledges the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples, the traditional custodians of the Canberra region, and recognises their continuous connection to culture, community and Country.
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