ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1998, Easels of Utopia presents a discussion of art's duration and contingency within the avant garde's aesthetic parameters, which throughout this century have constructed, influenced, and informed our definitions of modernity. In this context the book reads Umberto Boccioni's Futurism as reminiscent of Thomist realism; proposes Caravaggism's historical relevance to the election of individuality in post-war realism; and draws the readers attention to the aesthetic implications in Carlo Carrà's metaphysical art and its reappraisal of the early Renaissance. Following a contextual analysis of the historic avant-garde in Part One, Part Two presents parallel discussions of Italian and British questions, articulated by the works of Marino Marini, Francis Bacon, Renato Guttuso and Stanley Spencer in their return to individuality within art's aesthetic construct. The author argues that this initiates a return to 'lost' beginnings where form seeks knowledge, content regains an ability to anarchize, and art recognizes its contingent condition.

chapter |4 pages

Modus operandi

part One|1 pages

Contexts of Quidditas

chapter 1|9 pages

Name, tragedy, farce

The story so far

chapter 2|10 pages

Searching an absolute

Aquinas, Bergson, Boccioni

chapter 3|20 pages

Ethical plasticism

Boccioni, Carrà, Marinetti

chapter 4|17 pages

Myth, duration

Croce, Sorel, Bergson

part Two|1 pages

Utterance Of Fact

chapter 5|21 pages

Re-Beauty

Carrà, Duns Scotus, De Chirico

chapter 6|20 pages

Caravaggist genealogies

Caravaggio, Hegel

chapter 7|26 pages

Aeneas’s guise

Marini, Bacon

chapter 8|24 pages

Rehearsals

Spencer, Guttuso