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Expressionism

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Reflected the worries and despair of an entire society torn between wars and extremism. ... in action, which took place on stage, backstage, and in the hall itself. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Expressionism


1
Expressionism Futurism
  • By Raia Mihaylova

2
EXPRESSIONISM
  • The tendency of an artist to distort reality for
    an emotional effect.
  • Methods used-distortion, blurring, colour
    exaggeration.
  • Exhibited in many art forms-painting, literature,
    film, architecture, music, and theater.
  • Term often implies emotional torment
  • Reflected the worries and despair of an entire
    society torn between wars and extremism.

3
History
  • Developed in Germany between 1900 and 1925
  • The word first appeared in 1911 during the 22nd
    exhibit of the Berliner Sezession
  • Painters cared to a small extent about the
    technical aspects of painting, They wanted to
    paint their emotional reponse to objects and not
    just what they saw.
  • Movement inspired by the troubles and
    uncertainties attached to the early 20th
    century-WWI and Nazism

4
History cont.
  • Expressionism was particularly initiated in the
    late 1800s by James Ensor, Vincent van Gogh, and
    Edvard Munch.
  • The movement developed itself in 1905 with a
    group of painters named Die Brucke (The Bridge)
  • It dissolved in 1913
  • Another group formed-the New association of
    Artists, which later renamed itself Der Blaue
    Reiter (The Blue Knight )

5
Expressionism beyond Germany
  • Austria-Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980) and Egon
    Schiele (1890-1918)
  • France-George Rouault (1871-1958)
  • Italy-Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920)

6
Expressionist theatre
  • Theatre with expressionistic goals in mind
  • Primary aim is not to educate, entertain, or to
    be realistic. Rather, its goal is to express
    emotion.
  • Actors behave how most people wouldnt in real
    life
  • Set designs were exaggerated to emphasise the
    tone of the setting

7
Expressionist theatre
  • Oskar Kokoschkas 1909 playlet, Murdered, The
    Hope of Women, is often considered the 1st
    expressionist drama.
  • Extreme simplification of characters to mythic
    types, choral effects, loud dialogue and
    heightened intensity all later became
    characteristics of expressionist plays.
  • Characters were often impersonal or nameless.
  • Arose of the impulse to rebel against materialist
    values of the older middle-class generation

8
Style of expressionist theatre
  • Plays often dramatized the spiritual awakening
    and sufferings of their protagonist. Referred to
    as Stationendramen (station plays).
  • Modeled on the episodic presentation of the
    suffering and death of Jesus.
  • Also, dramatized the struggle against bourgeois
    values and established authority.

9
Important figures
  • Forerunners of Expressionism are accepted to be
    Frank Wedekind and Strindberg
  • Georg Kaiser and Ernst Toller-most famour
    playwrights.
  • Reinhard Sorge, Walter Hasenclever, Hans Henny
    Jahnn, and Arnolt Bronnen.

10
Plays and Drama
  • Oskar Kokoschka- Murdered, The Hope of Women.
  • Richard Sorge- The Begger (Der Bettler)
  • Arnolt Bronnen-Vatermord

11
FUTURISM
  • Appeared in 1909 in Italy.
  • Founder-poet/playwright Tommaso Marinetti, who
    wrote the Manifesto of Futurism.
  • It was considered to have greatly influenced
    growing Fascism
  • Works reflected the hatred for political and
    artistic traditions and the intense will of
    proving the importance of Italy in the industrial
    and machine age.
  • First deliberately organized, self-conscious
    movement of the 20th century.

12
Futurism
  • One of the aims of futurism was to object to
    traditional conventionalism and to wage war
    against the art of the 19th century.
  • The 20th century was a new time when people were
    starting to prosper, health and hygiene was
    getting more sophisticated and people were living
    longer. The world was changing but art wasnt.
  • Futurism was about getting art to evolve and
    become more sophisticated.

13
Reform
  • In Italy at this time, the government was seen as
    corrupt and had ulterior motives which didnt fit
    that of the peoples ideals.
  • Futurists demanded change, they wanted reform!
  • They believed the only way to inspire Italy with
    the warlike spirit was through theatre.
  • Futurist interest in theatre is shown through a
    series of manifestos on theatrical creativity.

14
The Variety Theatre
  • Emphesized the important contribution which
    music-hall entertainment could make to
    avant-garde theatre.
  • The manifesto of the Variety Theatre
  • Anti-academic, primitive, and naïve. Destroyed
    the Solemn, the Sacred, the Serious, and the
    Sublime
  • Focused upon its practical character
  • - meant to entertain
  • - inventive (could never stop or repeat
    itself)
  • -marvelous quality (made possible by modern
    technical equipment and use of the cinema)

15
Futurist marvelous
  • Accomplished by false impression, ridicule,
    irony, satire, analogy, cynicism and absurdity.
  • By new uses of light, sound, noise, speech, and
    speed.
  • Pain was falsified, serious situations were
    portrayed as ridiculous.
  • Public was seen as collaborating in action, which
    took place on stage, backstage, and in the hall
    itself.
  • Brilliant actors-artist Fregoli and Petrolini.

16
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17
Soirees
  • Precursors of the Synthetic theatre
    performances.
  • Poetic and political meetings
  • 1st such meeting held at the Teatro Costanzi in
    Rome.
  • A model of Soirees
  • Turning into theatrical events.

18
The Futurist Synthetic Theatre1915
  • Synthetic-very brief
  • Atechnical-to destroy the technique
  • Dynamic, simulateneous-born of improvisation,
    lightening-like intuition.
  • Autonomous, alogical, unreal-not be subject to
    logic, will resemble nothing but itself.
  • Excite the audience

19
Continued
  • Opposed to comedy, drama, tragedy
  • Used lines written in free words, interpretation,
    acted-out poem, the dramatized sensations, comic
    dialogue.

20
Famous playwrights
  • UMBERTO BOCCIONI
  • The Bachelor Apartment / La Garconniere
  • The Body That Ascends / Il Corpo che Sale.
  • Genius and Culture / Genio e Coltura
  • PAOLO BUZZI
  • The Futurist Prize / Il Premio di Futurismo
  • Parallelepiped / Parallelepipedo
  • FRANCESCO CANGIULLO
  • The Lady-Killer and the Four Seasons / ll
    Donnaiuolo e le 4 Stagioni
  • The Paunch of the Vase / La Pancia del Vaso
    Detonation / Detonazione.

21
Continued
CHARACTER A BULLET Road at night, cold,
deserted. A minute of silence.--A gunshot.
CURTAIN
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