Comparative Vandalism: Asger Jorn and the Artistic Attitude to Life

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Ashgate, 1998 - Art - 224 pages
The Danish artist Asger Jorn (1914-73), painter, draughtsman, potter and sculptor, was one of the most prominent figures of his generation in Europe. His characteristic paintings were spontaneous, using energetic brushstrokes, splashing and spotting with a wide-ranging palette. He was also a founder member of Cobra (1948-51) and subsequently several other international groupings, which coalesced in 1957 in the setting-up of the Situationist International with French and Italian writers and artists. Fascinated by the philosophical debate on the position of the artist in contemporary life and the artist's relationship to the past, Jorn broke with the Situationist International in 1961 over the issue of whether an artist is an instigator of cultural change or only an instrument of political change. For the next four years, he committed himself to 'a first complete revision of the existing philosophical system' with the intention of placing the artist at the centre.

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Contents

Introduction
3
The first complete revision of the existing philosophical
11
The Archimedean point
27
Copyright

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