Skip to Content

Avant-Garde Art in Everyday Life: Early Twentieth-Century European Modernism

Share

Avant Garde In Everyday Life

The Art Institute of Chicago, 2011

Available to booksellers from Yale University Press.

Beginning around 1910, vanguard artists demanded that true art go beyond the intellectual and transform daily life. This volume highlights the work of six influential European artists who took this idea into the wider world, where it merged enthusiastically with demands in the industrial marketplace, the nascent mass media, and urban popular culture.

Featured are Piet Zwart, a Dutch designer who brought his minimalist aesthetic vision to ubiquitous items like biscuit boxes and postage stamps; Karel Teige, leader of the Czech avant-garde, who produced brilliant book and journal designs; his compatriot Ladislav Sutnar, who brought modernist “good design” to tableware, clothing, and children’s toys; Gustav Klutsis, who pioneered using photomontage for political purposes; Lazar (El) Lissitzky, who produced some of the most exciting book, poster, and exhibition designs of the 1920s and 1930s in Germany and Russia; and German artist John Heartfield, who worked exclusively in photomontage to design book covers, journals, and agitational posters for the Communist cause.

Edited by Matthew S. Witkovsky

Essays by Jared Ash, Maria Gough, Jindřich Toman, Nancy J. Troy, Matthew S. Witkovsky, and Andrés Mario Zervigón

160 pages, 9 1/2 x 11 1/2 in.
149 color and 27 b/w ills.

Hardcover $50.00
ISBN: 978-0-300-16609-5

Share

Sign up for our enewsletter to receive updates.

Learn more

Image actions

Share