قراءة كتاب Adventures in the Arts Informal Chapters on Painters, Vaudeville, and Poets

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Adventures in the Arts
Informal Chapters on Painters, Vaudeville, and Poets

Adventures in the Arts Informal Chapters on Painters, Vaudeville, and Poets

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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We have a fully functioning Criticism ... swarms and schools of makers of the sonorous complacencies of Judgment. We have an integral body of creative-minded men and women interposing itself with valiance upon the antithesis of the social resistance to social growth. Hartley is in some ways a continuance of Ryder. One stage is Ryder, the solitary who remained one. A second stage is Hartley, the solitary who stands against the more aggressive, more interested Marketplace.

You will find in this book the artist of a cultural epoch. This man has mastered the plastic messages of modern Europe: he has gone deep in the classic forms of the ancient Indian Dance. But he is, still, not very far from Ryder. He is always the child—whatever wise old worlds he contemplates—the child, wistful, poignant, trammeled, of New England.

Hartley has adventured not alone deep but wide. He steps from New Mexico to Berlin, from the salons of the Paris of Marie Laurencin to the dust and tang of the American Circus. He is eclectic. But wherever he goes he chronicles not so much these actual worlds as his own pleasure of them. They are but mirrors, many-shaped and lighted, for his own delicate, incisive humor. For Hartley is an innocent and a naïf. At times he is profound. Always he is profoundly simple.

Tragedy and Comedy are adult. The child's world is Tragicomic. So Marsden Hartley's. He is not deep enough—like most of our Moderns—in the pregnant chaos to be submerged in blackness by the hot struggle of the creative will. He may weep, but he can smile next moment at a pretty song. He may be hurt, but he gets up to dance.

In this book—the autobiography of a creator—Marsden Hartley peers variously into the modern world: but it is in search of Fairies.

Waldo Frank.

Lisbon, June, 1921.


CONTENTS

PAGE
Introduction by Waldo Frank xi
Foreword
Concerning Fairy Tales and Me 3
Part One
1. The Red Man 13
2. Whitman and Cézanne 30
3. Ryder 37
4. Winslow Homer 42
5. American Values in Painting 50
6. Modern Art in America 59
7. Our Imaginatives 65
8. Our Impressionists 74
9. Arthur B. Davies 80
10. Rex Slinkard 87
11. Some American Water-Colorists 96
12.

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