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List of Illustrations and Provenance Descriptions
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Editorial ix
-
Section 1: Critical responses to Exhibitions, conferences and publications
- The Legacy and Topicality of Futurism 3
- The Centenary of 1913, or Russian Futurism ‘as such’ 7
- Almada Negreiros: A Futurist Poet, and Much More 21
- La poética de la vanguardia 27
- Sound and Silence in Futurist Poetry 31
- Marinetti i futuryzm w Polsce 36
- Action / Reaction: Futurism in Belgium and Europe 44
- Futurism and Modernist Magazines 49
- New Research into Anarchism and Futurism 61
-
Section 2: Research Reports on Countries and Artistic Disciplines
- French Research on Literary Futurism 71
-
Section 3: Caricatures and Satires of Futurism in the Contemporary Press
- A “Hypermodern” Futurist in the Munich Satirical Magazine, Fliegende Blätter (1912) 87
- A Caricature of Futurism in the Spanish Magazine, Buen Humor (1923) 91
- The Futurist Exhibition at the Sackville Gallery (1912) and Charles Harrison’s Caricature, “The New Terror” 95
- A Japanese View on Futurism in 1922 in the Daily Newspaper Kokumin Shimbun 99
- The Reception of Russian Futurism through Satire: The Case of the 1913 Mishen’ Debate 103
- A Caricature of Futurism in the New York Sun (1914) 107
- Marinetti’s Visit to Cairo in December 1929: Kimon Evan Marengo’s caricatures in Maalesh 111
-
Section 4: Futurism Studies
- The Reception of Futurism in France (1909–1912) 117
- Mallarmé and His Futurist ‘Heir’ Marinetti 134
- Futurism in the Netherlands, 1909–1940 165
- No Future for the Futurists? Art of the Commune and the Quest for a New Art in Post-Revolutionary Russia 202
- The New Slovene Theatre and Italian Futurism: Delak, Cernigoj and the Historical Avant-garde in Venezia Giulia 230
- Kara-Darvish and Armenian Futurism 263
- The Reception of Italian Futurism in Hungarian Painting and Literature 301
- The Reception of Italian Futurism in Brazilian Periodicals: 1909, 1922 and after 328
- Bartolomé Galíndez’s Magazine, Los raros: A ‘Symbolist’ Fusion of Futurism and Ultraism 360
- Futurist Influences in the Work of Guillermo de Torre 389
- The Reception of Futurism in Greece and Marinetti’s Visit to Athens (1933) 421
- Theodor Däubler: A Mediator between Florentine Futurism and German Modernism 450
- Photodynamism and Vortography: The Futurist Anti-Portraits of Anton Giulio Bragaglia and Alvin Langdon Coburn 477
-
Section 5: Bibliography
- A Bibliography of Publications on Futurism, 2011–2013 507
-
Section 6: Back Matter
- List of Illustrations and Provenance Descriptions 537
- Notes on Contributors 541
- Name Index 547
- Subject Index 583
- Geographical Index 609
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Editorial ix
-
Section 1: Critical responses to Exhibitions, conferences and publications
- The Legacy and Topicality of Futurism 3
- The Centenary of 1913, or Russian Futurism ‘as such’ 7
- Almada Negreiros: A Futurist Poet, and Much More 21
- La poética de la vanguardia 27
- Sound and Silence in Futurist Poetry 31
- Marinetti i futuryzm w Polsce 36
- Action / Reaction: Futurism in Belgium and Europe 44
- Futurism and Modernist Magazines 49
- New Research into Anarchism and Futurism 61
-
Section 2: Research Reports on Countries and Artistic Disciplines
- French Research on Literary Futurism 71
-
Section 3: Caricatures and Satires of Futurism in the Contemporary Press
- A “Hypermodern” Futurist in the Munich Satirical Magazine, Fliegende Blätter (1912) 87
- A Caricature of Futurism in the Spanish Magazine, Buen Humor (1923) 91
- The Futurist Exhibition at the Sackville Gallery (1912) and Charles Harrison’s Caricature, “The New Terror” 95
- A Japanese View on Futurism in 1922 in the Daily Newspaper Kokumin Shimbun 99
- The Reception of Russian Futurism through Satire: The Case of the 1913 Mishen’ Debate 103
- A Caricature of Futurism in the New York Sun (1914) 107
- Marinetti’s Visit to Cairo in December 1929: Kimon Evan Marengo’s caricatures in Maalesh 111
-
Section 4: Futurism Studies
- The Reception of Futurism in France (1909–1912) 117
- Mallarmé and His Futurist ‘Heir’ Marinetti 134
- Futurism in the Netherlands, 1909–1940 165
- No Future for the Futurists? Art of the Commune and the Quest for a New Art in Post-Revolutionary Russia 202
- The New Slovene Theatre and Italian Futurism: Delak, Cernigoj and the Historical Avant-garde in Venezia Giulia 230
- Kara-Darvish and Armenian Futurism 263
- The Reception of Italian Futurism in Hungarian Painting and Literature 301
- The Reception of Italian Futurism in Brazilian Periodicals: 1909, 1922 and after 328
- Bartolomé Galíndez’s Magazine, Los raros: A ‘Symbolist’ Fusion of Futurism and Ultraism 360
- Futurist Influences in the Work of Guillermo de Torre 389
- The Reception of Futurism in Greece and Marinetti’s Visit to Athens (1933) 421
- Theodor Däubler: A Mediator between Florentine Futurism and German Modernism 450
- Photodynamism and Vortography: The Futurist Anti-Portraits of Anton Giulio Bragaglia and Alvin Langdon Coburn 477
-
Section 5: Bibliography
- A Bibliography of Publications on Futurism, 2011–2013 507
-
Section 6: Back Matter
- List of Illustrations and Provenance Descriptions 537
- Notes on Contributors 541
- Name Index 547
- Subject Index 583
- Geographical Index 609