"The Mysticism of Money": Precisionist Painting and Machine Age America - Softcover

Hemingway, Andrew

 
9781934772805: "The Mysticism of Money": Precisionist Painting and Machine Age America

Synopsis

George Ault? Stefan Hirsch? Louis Lozowick? Names of little significance except to specialists in American art of the 1920's and 1930's. But neither Ault nor Hirsch nor Lozowick is a marginal artist if the scope if Modernist culture in America is broadened to include proponents of leftist politics. Then, Andrew Hemingway, demonstrates, their paintings acquire great importance as critical representations of capitalists system. Hemingway is a masterful guide to the discussions and publications that fed some artists' drive to make art relevant to industrial society. With this context in hand, Hemingway looks closely as the artists' espousal of Precisionism, the hard-edged style often regarded as an apolitical American variant on Cubism. By contrast, Hemingway contends it served some artists as a vehicle for portraying the dehuminizing consequences of the industrial regime. His book revolves around the notion that the anti-capitalism of Ault, Hirsch and Lozowick functioned as a king of "romance" based on the opposition of the natural to the artificial or reified. No prior book offers such a provocative (and timely) account of the developments of Precisionist painting. It is made all the more valuable by its consideration of the writings of John Dos Passos, Sinclair Lewis, and Theodore Dreiser.

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About the Author

Andrew Hemingway is a Professor of the History of Art at University College, London and the author of numerous publications, including 'Artists on the Left: American Artists and the Communist Movement, 1926- 1956' and the contributing editor of 'Marx and the History of Art."

From the Inside Flap

In this much-anticipated book, acclaimed art historian Andrew Hemingway overturns orthodox views of Precisionist art and, more generally, of American Modernism. A trio of neglected artists--Stefan Hirsch, Louis Lozowick, and George C. Ault--are finally accorded in-depth analysis; and, drawing on an unrivaled knowledge of left-leaning politics, Hemingway connects Precisionism to a milieu in which experimental theater, a wave of "little magazines," and engagement with communist politics stirred debate and conflict.

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