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Overview"Surrealism in its late phase often abandoned neutral exhibition spaces in favour of environments that embodied subjective ideologies. These exhibitions offered startled viewers an early version of installation art before the form existed as such. In Displaying the Marvelous, Lewis Kachur explores this development by analyzing three elaborate Surrealist installations created between 1938 and 1942. The first two, the ""Exposition Internationale du Surr alisme"" (1938) and the ""Dream of Venus"" at the New York World's Fair (1939), dealt with the fetishization of the female body. The third, ""First Papers of Surrealism"" (1942), focused not on the figure but on the entire expanse of the exhibition space, thus contributing to the development of nonfigurative art in New York. Kachur presents a full visual and verbal reconstruction of each of the exhibitions, evoking the sequence that the contemporary viewer would have encountered. This book considers Marcel Duchamp and Salvador Dali, two artists who are not usually compared, within a common framework. Duchamp specialized in frustrating the spectator, using his ironic wit to call into question the definition of the work of art. Dali was a master at disorienting the senses by establishing and then undermining everyday spatial and object properties. The Surrealist challenge, as voiced by Andre Breton, was to evoke the marvelous. Duchamp and Dali extended that challenge to the physical and commercial realm of the exhibition installation." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lewis KachurPublisher: MIT Press Ltd Imprint: MIT Press Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.617kg ISBN: 9780262611824ISBN 10: 0262611821 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 28 February 2003 Recommended Age: From 18 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAnyone specializing in the history of Surrealism or the history of installation art will find this book essential reading. - John A. Walker, The Art Book Unique and perceptive research... an exacting and truly exciting visual and verbal coverage of the exhibitions. A remarkable and insightful narrative of installation art's beginnings [as well as] of the environments of the 1960s as a bridge to installation art's solidification into a genre. - Petra Rigby Watson, Parachute A compulsive and beautifully presented read for those with an interest in the key debates surrounding the body and its interiors/exteriors. - David Gove Surman, Leonardo A compulsive and beautifully presented read. David Gove Surman Leonardo Unique and perceptive research...a remarkable and insightful narrative of installation art's beginnings. Petra Rigby Watson Parachute A compulsive and beautifully presented read. David Gove Surman Leonardo Unique and perceptive research... an exacting and truly exciting visual and verbal coverage of the exhibitions. Petra Rigby Watson Parachute Kachur's account is a valuable contribution to the reception history of modern art in American popular culture. -- Sheldon Nodelman, Art in America A compulsive and beautifully presented read. -- David Gove Surman, Leonardo Unique and perceptive research ... an exacting and truly exciting visual and verbal coverage of the exhibitions. -- Petra Rigby Watson, Parachute Anyone specializing in the history of Surrealism or the history of installation art will find this book essential reading. -- John A. Walker, The Art Book A splendid analysis of the late Surrealist exhibitions. Anyone interested in Surrealist art would want this book; anyone interested in the consideration of display in twentieth-century art must have this book. --Richard Martin, former curator, Metropolitan Museum of Art Perceptive, fascinating, and written with pleasure and delight. The reciprocal exchange between art work and its context is presented with a steady, at times inspired, sense of inquiry. --Brian O'Doherty, writer Author InformationLewis Kachur is Associate Professor of Art History at Kean University, New Jersey. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |