
The Avant-Garde in Interwar England addresses modernism's ties to tradition, commerce, nationalism, and spirituality through an analysis of the assimilation of visual modernism in England between 1910 and 1939. During this period, a debate raged across the nation concerning the purpose of art in society. On one side were the aesthetic formalists, led by members of London's Bloomsbury Group, who thought art was autonomous from everyday life. On the other were England's so-called medieval modernists, many of them from the provincial North, who maintained that art had direct social functions and moral consequences. As Michael T. Saler demonstrates in this fascinating volume, the heated exchange between these two camps would ultimately set the terms for how modern art was perceived by the British public.Histories of English modernism have usually emphasized the seminal role played by the Bloomsbury Group in introducing, celebrating, and defining modernism, but Saler's study instead argues that, during the watershed years between the World Wars, modern art was most often understood in the terms laid out by the medieval modernists. As the name implies, these artists and intellectuals closely associated modernism with the art of the Middle Ages, building on the ideas of John Ruskin, William Morris, and other nineteenth-century romantic medievalists. In their view, modernism was a spiritual, national, and economic movement, a new and different artistic sensibility that was destined to revitalize England's culture as well as its commercial exports when applied to advertising and industrial design.This book, then, concerns the busy intersection of art, trade, and national identity in the early decades of twentieth-century England. Specifically, it explores the life and work of Frank Pick, managing director of the London Underground, whose famous patronage of modern artists, architects, and designers was guided by a desire to unite nineteenth-century arts and crafts with twent
This work investigates how the integration of visual modernism into English society between 1910 and 1939 was shaped by a tension between aesthetic formalism and the social-moral philosophy of the medieval modernists. Michael T. Saler, a scholar of cultural history, utilizes archival research and institutional records to challenge the traditional Bloomsbury-centric narrative of English modernism. He argues that the public perception of modern art was primarily defined by a group of intellectuals who sought to reconcile modern design with the spiritual and economic values of the Middle Ages.
What You Will Find
Scholars recognize this text as a significant revisionist history that shifts the focus of modernism away from purely aesthetic concerns toward institutional and commercial applications. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the research regarding the role of patronage in shaping public art.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2001-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195349067
ISBN-13:
9780195349061
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