Enchantments: Joseph Cornell and American Modernism
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Princeton University Press, 2021.
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English
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9780691215020

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APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Marci Kwon., & Marci Kwon|AUTHOR. (2021). Enchantments: Joseph Cornell and American Modernism . Princeton University Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Marci Kwon and Marci Kwon|AUTHOR. 2021. Enchantments: Joseph Cornell and American Modernism. Princeton University Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Marci Kwon and Marci Kwon|AUTHOR. Enchantments: Joseph Cornell and American Modernism Princeton University Press, 2021.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Marci Kwon, and Marci Kwon|AUTHOR. Enchantments: Joseph Cornell and American Modernism Princeton University Press, 2021.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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Grouped Work ID95ef1d4c-8e23-ef0c-289b-69eee417d176-eng
Full titleenchantments joseph cornell and american modernism
Authorkwon marci
Grouping Categorybook
Last Update2024-05-15 02:00:54AM
Last Indexed2024-06-15 05:03:27AM

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First LoadedAug 19, 2023
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Hoopla Extract Information

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    [synopsis] => Marci Kwon is assistant professor of art and art history at Stanford University. She lives in Palo Alto, California. 
	The first major work to examine Joseph Cornell's relationship to American modernism

Joseph Cornell (1903–1972) is best known for his exquisite and alluring box constructions, in which he transformed found objects-such as celestial charts, glass ice cubes, and feathers-into enchanted worlds that blur the boundaries between fantasy and the commonplace. Situating Cornell within the broader artistic, cultural, and political debates of midcentury America, this innovative and interdisciplinary account reveals enchantment's relevance to the history of American modernism.

In this beautifully illustrated book, Marci Kwon explores Cornell's attempts to convey enchantment-an ephemeral experience that exceeds rational explanation-in material form. Examining his box constructions, graphic design projects, and cinematic experiments, she shows how he turned to formal strategies drawn from movements like Transcendentalism and Romanticism to figure the immaterial. Kwon provides new perspectives on Cornell's artistic and graphic design career, bringing vividly to life a wide circle of acquaintances that included artists, poets, writers, and filmmakers such as Mina Loy, Lincoln Kirstein, Frank O'Hara, and Stan Brakhage. Cornell's participation in these varied milieus elucidates enchantment's centrality to midcentury conversations about art's potential for power and moral authority, and reveals how enchantment and modernity came to be understood as opposing forces. Leading contemporary artists such as Betye Saar and Carolee Schneemann turned to Cornell's enchantment as a resource for their own anti-racist, feminist projects.

Spanning four decades of the artist's career, Enchantments sheds critical light on Cornell's engagement with many key episodes in American modernism, from Abstract Expressionism, 1930s "folk art," and the emergence of New York School poetry and experimental cinema to the transatlantic migration of Symbolism, Surrealism, and ballet. "Kwon's handsomely illustrated book takes a deep dive into the culture that influenced Cornell, and situates him within the art and politics-and politics of art-of his time. . . .[A] beautifully produced book." "In her book Enchantments . . .[Marci Kwon] gives what amounts to a hidden history of modernism in this country, placing Cornell in context and revealing his connections to his contemporaries and his influence on later generations of artists. She also explores the concept of enchantment and mounts a passionate defense of it."---John Dorfman, Art & Antiques "A superb achievement. . . . [and] the best treatment of the artist's career, milieu, and work to date."---Massimo Introvigne, Novo Religio "Marci Kwon's major new study of Joseph Cornell is a strikingly erudite work of critical sympathy. Enchantments looks outward, placing Cornell's allusive oeuvre among the artist's large and dynamic circle of interlocutors. But it also provides a new valuation of individual experience, and reveals Cornell as a kind of Benjaminian collector, one who arrays the detritus of culture against the catastrophes of the twentieth century."-Jeremy Braddock, author of Collecting as Modernist Practice "Neither quite insider nor outsider, Cornell occupied a liminal position in the overlapping spheres of contemporary art, experimental film, vanguard poetry, dance, and ballet in relation to which his work is best approached, Marci Kwon argues in this fascinating and illuminating study. Incisive and fine-grained, her analyses of individual artworks, key exhibitions, and formative personal relationships reveal the galvanizing role played by fantasy, dream, imagination-'white magic'-at the core of Cornell's aesthetic. But Kwon's ambitious book goes beyond the confines of a revisionist monograph: she not only imbricates Cornell's preoccupation with enchantment with correl
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