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Distributed for University of Wales Press

The Reconciliation of Modernism

Ceri Richards and the second generation, 1930-1945

A critical contextualizing of the early work of modernist painter Ceri Richards.

This study assesses Ceri Richards’s early art and career, documenting experimental drawings and constructions. The emerging analysis establishes a complex relation between this artist and his European contemporaries—prominently Max Ernst, Joan Miró, Pablo Picasso, Constantin Brâncuși, and Hans Arp—contributing to an art historical study of the emergencies of modernism in Britain during the early twentieth century. The book includes a full account of Richards as a European modernist and of the dislocation of British artists’ engagement with, and Richards’s processing of, Paris surrealism; accompanying illustrations include previously unseen drawings and reconstructed early states, discussed here for the first time.

344 pages | 26 color plates and 46 halftones | 5.43 x 8.5 | © 2024

University of Wales Press - Studies in Visual Culture

Art: Art Criticism, Art--Biography, British Art


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Table of Contents

Foreword

Introduction
1 The Modern Artist
2 Europe and the Avant-Garde
3 Objective Abstraction
4 Subject and Object
5 Surrealism
6 Studies for Relief Constructions
7 Figures and Interiors
8 Flowers, Feathers and Bombs
9 Transformations and Flux
Conclusion

Select references
Index

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