Modern Art Galleries

FOTO | Modernity in Central Europe, 1918-1945

7th June to 31st August 2008 | Dean Gallery | £6 (£4)

The Cut-and-Paste World: War Returns

Just as the First World War advanced the development of central European modernism, particularly in photography, the Second World War brought that modernism to a horrific conclusion.

In these years of renewed catastrophic upheaval, some artists continued to turn to photomontage. Janusz Maria Brzeski, an artist trained in avant-garde circles but working for the press, used photomontage for sensational ends; his masterful, ghastly scenes of a violent modernism swing between cutting critique and trivial commentary. Other artists during this time used photomontage only privately or in forbidden publications. Karel Teige assembled approximately four hundred photomontages for himself and his closest friends, in which he recycled popular media culture and much of the history of art; his Czech compatriot Jindřich Heisler made photomontages while hiding for more than three years to escape deportation.

What had begun as a groundbreaking means to describe the promise of modernity became, in the later 1930s and 1940s, a way to reflect upon that promise in what, for central Europe, were modernity’s twilight years.

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