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That’s the question the Futurists—an early 20th-century European art movement obsessed with modernity—posed in Manifesto Of Futurist Cooking.
Futurism, Dada, Surrealism, Suprematism — these are just a few of the movements that inspired “Manifesto,” a video installation at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
A comprehensive exhibition at Berlin's Martin-Gropius-Bau, called "Languages of Futurism," commemorates the 100th anniversary of the first Futurist Manifesto by documenting the diversity of ...
Anniversary exhibitions are typically timed to an individual artist's birth, but in this instance they celebrate a mass-media event, perhaps the first to have been orchestrated by an art-world ...
It would be Marinetti’s misfortune to live until 1944, time enough for him to lobby foolishly to make futurism Italy’s official state art and attempt an unlikely rapprochement with the church.
That Futurist architecture is not because of this an arid combination of practicality and usefulness, but remains art, i.e. synthesis and expression; ...
In another manifesto, published in 1912, Marinetti spoke of wanting not to suggest ideas or sensations but rather to “grasp them brutally and hurl them in the reader’s face,” and there’s ...
In 1909, F. T. Marinetti’s “Founding and Manifesto of Futurism” declared, “We will glorify war … militarism, patriotism … and scorn for women.” A new show at the Guggenheim Museum ...
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