Showing posts with label modernism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label modernism. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

What is modernism & postmodernism.

Modernism was a cultural movement that has now changed and separated into different areas; literature, architecture, art, music or applied arts. Modernists identified a crisis in economics, politics, society and culture. They believed that not one could answer questions. This was caused by industrialistation (Fordism) which forces humans to abide to "clock time". This led to alienation, the further we get away from our essential nature, the more alienated we are from ourselves and each other (Marx)

Some modernist rebelled against tradition and questioned why it had to be the same, why we couldn't progress.

19th Century Romanticism art emphasied on the emotional, individual subjective experience. The onlooker would be emotionally manipulated by what they saw.

From this came Realsim which focused on the objective truth. Reality was portrayed and was more dominant over subjective impression. The onlooker would have a balanced opinion with no personal attachment being expressed by the artist.


Moral Crisis
At the end of the 19th Century under the influence Darwinism, Marxism and Fordism, some artists & writers began to respond differently to modernity. After WWI people started to question truth and objectivity - due to the production on machines and men to fight under orders.

Modernity is always a response to modernity which is constant - everything is being updated and "improved".

Postmodernism can be seen as a rejection of modernism or a return to earlier forms. Some people stopped believing in anything - religion, truth of politics etc.

Is it a retro fad or just a bit of fun?
I don't think postmodernism will wear out because if it is done right it can be very successful, clever, fun and more interesting to the audience who are used to being a passive mass rather than individual interaction. Play is something that society says you should grow out off by the time you become an adult however most people will want a destraction from everyday life - postmodernism allows the audience to interact and become active in the music video, art, film etc which is becoming more and more available through things like iPads & Smart Phone apps.

Simulacrum is a copy of a copy without an original it is the ulitmate captailist artefact which is completely divorced from nature and reality.

Thursday, 26 January 2012

Modernism.

"The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there"


Before industrialisation we lacked the ability to mass produce things and relied on skilled craftsmen who had specific talents to produce things. When machines started to take over household "cottage" industries started to disappear as people turned to industrialised made products because they were produced faster and at a cheaper rate. As these machines required less specific skilled knowledge to produce things it meant more people were able to take up jobs in different fields that their predecessors would not have been able to do. For example in pre-industrialisation people would follow the craft of their fathers not only to carry on the business but because they were taught from a young age the skills.


Industrialisation was seen as progress which meant moving forward and leaving the past behind. It was revolution rather than evolution. The past was rejected by modernist artists and designers and they focused completely on the future. After the industrial revolution mass production meant everyone could own the same thing as products became less unique due to the lack of individual crafting. 

"If you look to the future and keep one eye on the past you are blind in one eye. If you keep both eyes on the future and no eyes on the past you are blind in both eyes and God have mercy on you." - Beniton
"In a kingdom of the blind, the one eyed man is King." - Desiderius Erasmus

Modernism started from about 1850. It proposes new forms of art on the grounds that they are more appropriate to present day and is characterised by constant innovation. It has often been driven by social and political issues, often utopian. Modernism was generally associated with ideal visions of human life, society and a belief in progress.

The terms modernism and modern art are used to describe the succession of art movements that critics and historians have identified since the Realism of Courbet, culminating in abstract art and its developments up to the 1960s. By that time modernism had become a dominant idea of art, and a particularly narrow theory of modernist painting had been made by the highly influential American critic Clement Greenberg. The reaction that then took place which was quickly identified as Postmodernism.
Postmodernism rejects the modernist ideology that ignores the past and treats both the past and the future as the same. It also highlighted the paradox of making everything depthless. 


"If the 'master craftsman' is no longer needed, what does that say about creation and talent?"
"If everyone is talented then no one is, if everyone can make music then no one can."