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Modernisme

Modernisme (Catalan pronunciation: [muðərˈnizmə], Catalan for "modernism"), also known as Catalan modernism and Catalan art nouveau, is the historiographic denomination given to an art and literature movement associated with the search of a new entitlement of Catalan culture, one of the most predominant cultures within Spain. Nowadays, it is considered a movement based on the cultural revindication of a Catalan identity. Its main form of expression was Modernista architecture, but it also encompassed many other arts, such as painting and sculpture, and especially the design and the decorative arts (cabinetmaking, carpentry, forged iron, ceramic tiles, ceramics, glass-making, silver and goldsmith work, etc.), which were particularly important, especially in their role as support to architecture. Modernisme was also a literary movement (poetry, fiction, drama).

Although Modernisme was part of a general trend that emerged in Europe around the turn of the 20th century, in Catalonia the trend acquired its own unique personality. Modernisme's distinct name comes from its special relationship, primarily with Catalonia and Barcelona, which were intensifying their local characteristics for socio-ideological reasons after the revival of Catalan culture and in the context of spectacular urban and industrial development. It is equivalent to a number of other fin de siècle art movements going by the names of Art Nouveau in France and Belgium, Jugendstil in Germany, Vienna Secession in Austria-Hungary, Liberty style in Italy and Modern or Glasgow Style in Scotland.

Modernisme was active from roughly 1888 (the First Barcelona World Fair) to 1911 (the death of Joan Maragall, the most important Modernista poet). The Modernisme movement was centred in the city of Barcelona, though it reached far beyond, and is best known for its architectural expression, especially in the work of Antoni Gaudí, Lluís Domènech i Montaner and Josep Puig i Cadafalch, but was also significant in sculpture, poetry, theatre and painting. Notable painters include Santiago Rusiñol, Ramon Casas,[1] Isidre Nonell, Hermen Anglada Camarasa, Joaquim Mir, Eliseu Meifrèn, Lluïsa Vidal and Miquel Utrillo. Notable sculptors are Josep Llimona, Eusebi Arnau and Miquel Blay.

Main concepts edit

 
Duana de Barcelona (Customs House), by Enric Sagnier

Catalan nationalism was an important influence upon Modernista artists, who were receptive to the ideas of Valentí Almirall and Enric Prat de la Riba and wanted Catalan culture to be regarded as equal to that of other European countries. Such ideas can be seen in some of Rusiñol's plays against the Spanish army (most notably L'Hèroe), in some authors close to anarchism (Jaume Brossa and Gabriel Alomar, for example) or in the articles of federalist anti-monarchic writers such as Miquel dels Sants Oliver. They also opposed the traditionalism and religiousness of the Renaixença Catalan Romantics, whom they ridiculed in plays such as Santiago Rusiñol's Els Jocs Florals de Canprosa (roughly, "The Poetry Contest of Proseland"), a satire of the revived Jocs Florals and the political milieu which promoted them.

Modernistes largely rejected bourgeois values, which they thought to be the opposite of art. Consequently, they adopted two stances: they either set themselves apart from society in a bohemian or culturalist attitude (Decadent and Parnassian poets, Symbolist playwrights, etc.) or they attempted to use art to change society (Modernista architects and designers, playwrights inspired by Henrik Ibsen, some of Maragall's poetry, etc.)

Architecture edit

 
The Castle of the Three Dragons in Barcelona

The earliest example of Modernista architecture is the Castle of the Three Dragons designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner in the Parc de la Ciutadella for the 1888 Barcelona Universal Exposition. It is a search for a particular style for Catalonia drawing on Medieval and Arab styles. Like the currents known in other countries as Art Nouveau, Jugendstil, Liberty style, Modern Style and Vienna Secession, Modernisme was closely related to the English Arts and Crafts movement and the Gothic Revival. As well as combining a rich variety of historically-derived elements, it is characterized by the predominance of the curve over the straight line, by rich decoration and detail, by the frequent use of vegetal and other organic motifs, the taste for asymmetry, a refined aestheticism and dynamic shapes.[2] While Barcelona was the centre of Modernista construction, the Catalan industrial bourgeoisie built industrial buildings and summer residences (cases d'estiueig) in many Catalan towns, notably Terrassa and Reus. The textile factory which is now home to the Catalan national technical museum mNACTEC is an outstanding example.

Antoni Gaudí is the best-known architect of this movement. Other influential architects were Lluís Domènech i Montaner and Josep Puig i Cadafalch, and later Josep Maria Jujol, Rafael Guastavino and Enrique Nieto.[3]

Architects edit

 
Casa Batlló by Antoni Gaudí in Barcelona

There were more than 100 architects who made buildings of the Modernista style, three of whom are particularly well known for their outstanding buildings: Antoni Gaudí, Lluís Domènech i Montaner and Josep Puig i Cadafalch.

  • Antoni Gaudí, who went beyond mainstream Modernisme, creating a personal style based on observation of the nature and exploitation of traditional Catalan construction traditions. He was using regulated geometric shapes as the hyperbolic paraboloid, the hyperboloid, the helicoid and the conoide.[4]
  • Lluís Domènech i Montaner created a genuine alternative architecture. Along with Josep Vilaseca i Casanovas he worked towards a modern and international style. Domènech continued on from Viollet-le-Duc, his work characterized by a mix of constructive rationalism and ornaments inspired in the Hispano-Arab architecture as seen in the Palau de la Música Catalana, in the Hospital de Sant Pau or in the Institut Pere Mata of Reus.[5] His Hotel Internacional at Passeig de Colom in Barcelona (demolished after the 1888 World Fair) was an early example of industrial building techniques.
  • Josep Puig i Cadafalch was a Catalan architect, politician and historian who was involved in many projects to restore older buildings. One of his most well-known buildings is his rebuilding of the Casa Amatller in Passeig de Gràcia. It has elements in both the Catalan tradition and others originating in the Netherlands or the German Gothic. Neo-Gothic is also apparent in his Codorniu Winery (Caves Codorniu, 1904). He built Casa Amatller and Casa Trinxet.

Other architects edit

 
The Sagrada Família, an icon of Modernisme, by Antoni Gaudí

UNESCO World Heritage edit

Some of the works of Catalan Modernism have been listed by UNESCO as World Cultural Heritage:

Literature edit

In literature, Modernisme stood out the most in narrative. The nouvelles and novels of decadent writers such as Prudenci Bertrana (whose highly controversial Josafat involved a demented priest who ends up killing a prostitute), Caterina Albert (also known as Víctor Catala), author of bloody, expressionistic tales of rural violence, opposed to the idealisation of nature propugned by Catalan Romantics, or Raimon Casellas have been highly influential upon later Catalan narrative, essentially recovering a genre that had been lost due to political causes since the end of the Middle Ages. Those writers often, though not always, show influences from Russian literature of the 19th century and also Gothic novels. Still, works not influenced by those sources, such as Joaquim Ruyra's slice-of-life tales of the North-Eastern Catalan coast are perhaps even more influential than that of the aforementioned authors, and Rusiñol's well-known L'auca del senyor Esteve (roughly "The Tale of Mr. Esteve"; an auca is a type of illustrated broadside, similar to a one-sheet comic book) is an ironic critique of Catalan bourgeoisie more related to ironic, pre-Realist Catalan costumisme.

In poetry, Modernisme closely follows Symbolist and Parnassian poetry, with poets frequently crossing the line between both tendencies or alternating between them. Another important strain of Modernista poetry is Joan Maragall's "Paraula viva" (Living word) school, which advocated Nietzschean vitalism and spontaneous and imperfect writing over cold and thought-over poetry. Although poetry was very popular with the Modernistes and there were many poets involved in the movement, Maragall is the only Modernista poet who is still widely read today.

Modernista theatre was also important, as it smashed the insubstantial regional plays that were popular in 19th-century Catalonia. There were two main schools of Modernista theatre: social theatre, which intended to change society and denounce injustice—the worker stories of Ignasi Iglésias, for example Els Vells ("The old ones"); the Ibsen-inspired works of Joan Puig i Ferreter, most notably Aigües Encantades ("Enchanted Waters"); Rusiñol's antimilitaristic play L'Hèroe—and symbolist theatre, which emphasised the distance between artists and the bourgeoisie—for example, Rusiñol's Cigales i Formigues ("Cicadas and Ants") or El Jardí Abandonat ("The Abandoned Garden").

Linguistics edit

Modernista ideas impelled L'Avenç collaborator Pompeu Fabra to devise a new orthography for Catalan. However, only with the later rise of Noucentisme did his projects come to fruition and end the orthographic chaos which reigned at the time.

Decline edit

By 1910, Modernisme had been accepted by the bourgeoisie and had pretty much turned into a fad. It was around this time that Noucentista artists started to ridicule the rebel ideas of Modernisme and propelled a more bourgeois art and a more right-of-centre version of Catalan Nationalism, which eventually rose to power with the victory of the Lliga Regionalista in 1912. Until Miguel Primo de Rivera's dictatorship suppressed all substantial public use of Catalan, Noucentisme was immensely popular in Catalonia. However, Modernisme did have a revival of sorts during the Second Spanish Republic, with avant-garde writers such as Futurist Joan-Salvat Papasseit earning comparisons to Joan Maragall, and the spirit of Surrealists such as Josep Vicent Foix or Salvador Dalí being clearly similar to the rebellion of the Modernistes, what with Dalí proclaiming that Catalan Romanticist Àngel Guimerà was a putrefact pervert. However, the ties between Catalan art from the 1930s and Modernisme are not that clear, as said artists were not consciously attempting to continue any tradition.

Modernista architecture survived longer. The Spanish city of Melilla in Northern Africa experienced an economic boom at the turn of the 20th century, and its new bourgeoisie showed its riches by massively ordering Modernista buildings. The workshops established there by Catalan architect Enrique Nieto continued producing decorations in this style even when it was out of fashion in Barcelona, which results in Melilla having, oddly enough, the second-largest concentration of Modernista works after Barcelona.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hughes, Robert (1993) 'Barcelona', London, ISBN 0-00-272167-8, p. 253.
  2. ^ Solà-Morales, I, (1992) 'Arquitectura Modernista, fi de segle a Barcelona', Barcelona, ISBN 84-252-1563-3.
  3. ^ Mackay, David, 'Modern architecture in Barcelona, 1854-1929', Barcelona, 1985. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2012-08-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ http://noticias.arq.com.mx/Detalles/9955.html. 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Arquitectura modernista". www.arteespana.com.
  6. ^ es:Salvador Vinyals
  7. ^ https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/320/multiple=1&unique_number=364 Official List of the UNESCO Site "Works of Antoni Gaudí" (1994, 2005)
  8. ^ https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/804/multiple=1&unique_number=950 Official List of the UNESCO site "Palau de la Música Catalana and Hospital de Sant Pau, Barcelona" (1997)

External links edit

  • "Modernisms", at the MNAC (Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya), in English.
  • Modernisme Route Barcelona, in English.
  • Art Nouveau in Catalonia, in English.
  • Museu del Modernisme Català / Museum of Modernism, museum in Barcelona dedicated to Modernisme (in English).

modernisme, confused, with, modernism, world, wide, movement, arts, architecture, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citatio. Not to be confused with Modernism a world wide movement in the arts and architecture This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Modernisme Catalan pronunciation muderˈnizme Catalan for modernism also known as Catalan modernism and Catalan art nouveau is the historiographic denomination given to an art and literature movement associated with the search of a new entitlement of Catalan culture one of the most predominant cultures within Spain Nowadays it is considered a movement based on the cultural revindication of a Catalan identity Its main form of expression was Modernista architecture but it also encompassed many other arts such as painting and sculpture and especially the design and the decorative arts cabinetmaking carpentry forged iron ceramic tiles ceramics glass making silver and goldsmith work etc which were particularly important especially in their role as support to architecture Modernisme was also a literary movement poetry fiction drama Although Modernisme was part of a general trend that emerged in Europe around the turn of the 20th century in Catalonia the trend acquired its own unique personality Modernisme s distinct name comes from its special relationship primarily with Catalonia and Barcelona which were intensifying their local characteristics for socio ideological reasons after the revival of Catalan culture and in the context of spectacular urban and industrial development It is equivalent to a number of other fin de siecle art movements going by the names of Art Nouveau in France and Belgium Jugendstil in Germany Vienna Secession in Austria Hungary Liberty style in Italy and Modern or Glasgow Style in Scotland Modernisme was active from roughly 1888 the First Barcelona World Fair to 1911 the death of Joan Maragall the most important Modernista poet The Modernisme movement was centred in the city of Barcelona though it reached far beyond and is best known for its architectural expression especially in the work of Antoni Gaudi Lluis Domenech i Montaner and Josep Puig i Cadafalch but was also significant in sculpture poetry theatre and painting Notable painters include Santiago Rusinol Ramon Casas 1 Isidre Nonell Hermen Anglada Camarasa Joaquim Mir Eliseu Meifren Lluisa Vidal and Miquel Utrillo Notable sculptors are Josep Llimona Eusebi Arnau and Miquel Blay Contents 1 Main concepts 2 Architecture 3 Architects 3 1 Other architects 4 UNESCO World Heritage 5 Literature 6 Linguistics 7 Decline 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksMain concepts edit nbsp Duana de Barcelona Customs House by Enric SagnierCatalan nationalism was an important influence upon Modernista artists who were receptive to the ideas of Valenti Almirall and Enric Prat de la Riba and wanted Catalan culture to be regarded as equal to that of other European countries Such ideas can be seen in some of Rusinol s plays against the Spanish army most notably L Heroe in some authors close to anarchism Jaume Brossa and Gabriel Alomar for example or in the articles of federalist anti monarchic writers such as Miquel dels Sants Oliver They also opposed the traditionalism and religiousness of the Renaixenca Catalan Romantics whom they ridiculed in plays such as Santiago Rusinol s Els Jocs Florals de Canprosa roughly The Poetry Contest of Proseland a satire of the revived Jocs Florals and the political milieu which promoted them Modernistes largely rejected bourgeois values which they thought to be the opposite of art Consequently they adopted two stances they either set themselves apart from society in a bohemian or culturalist attitude Decadent and Parnassian poets Symbolist playwrights etc or they attempted to use art to change society Modernista architects and designers playwrights inspired by Henrik Ibsen some of Maragall s poetry etc Architecture edit nbsp The Castle of the Three Dragons in BarcelonaThe earliest example of Modernista architecture is the Castle of the Three Dragons designed by Lluis Domenech i Montaner in the Parc de la Ciutadella for the 1888 Barcelona Universal Exposition It is a search for a particular style for Catalonia drawing on Medieval and Arab styles Like the currents known in other countries as Art Nouveau Jugendstil Liberty style Modern Style and Vienna Secession Modernisme was closely related to the English Arts and Crafts movement and the Gothic Revival As well as combining a rich variety of historically derived elements it is characterized by the predominance of the curve over the straight line by rich decoration and detail by the frequent use of vegetal and other organic motifs the taste for asymmetry a refined aestheticism and dynamic shapes 2 While Barcelona was the centre of Modernista construction the Catalan industrial bourgeoisie built industrial buildings and summer residences cases d estiueig in many Catalan towns notably Terrassa and Reus The textile factory which is now home to the Catalan national technical museum mNACTEC is an outstanding example Antoni Gaudi is the best known architect of this movement Other influential architects were Lluis Domenech i Montaner and Josep Puig i Cadafalch and later Josep Maria Jujol Rafael Guastavino and Enrique Nieto 3 Architects edit nbsp Casa Batllo by Antoni Gaudi in BarcelonaThere were more than 100 architects who made buildings of the Modernista style three of whom are particularly well known for their outstanding buildings Antoni Gaudi Lluis Domenech i Montaner and Josep Puig i Cadafalch Antoni Gaudi who went beyond mainstream Modernisme creating a personal style based on observation of the nature and exploitation of traditional Catalan construction traditions He was using regulated geometric shapes as the hyperbolic paraboloid the hyperboloid the helicoid and the conoide 4 Lluis Domenech i Montaner created a genuine alternative architecture Along with Josep Vilaseca i Casanovas he worked towards a modern and international style Domenech continued on from Viollet le Duc his work characterized by a mix of constructive rationalism and ornaments inspired in the Hispano Arab architecture as seen in the Palau de la Musica Catalana in the Hospital de Sant Pau or in the Institut Pere Mata of Reus 5 His Hotel Internacional at Passeig de Colom in Barcelona demolished after the 1888 World Fair was an early example of industrial building techniques Josep Puig i Cadafalch was a Catalan architect politician and historian who was involved in many projects to restore older buildings One of his most well known buildings is his rebuilding of the Casa Amatller in Passeig de Gracia It has elements in both the Catalan tradition and others originating in the Netherlands or the German Gothic Neo Gothic is also apparent in his Codorniu Winery Caves Codorniu 1904 He built Casa Amatller and Casa Trinxet Other architects edit Enric Sagnier i Villavecchia the great builder of buildings for the bourgeoisie to the l Eixample Josep Maria Jujol i Gibert Gaudi s collaborator creator of the fountain of the Placa Espanya in Barcelona and professor of the Escola Superior d Arquitectura Cesar Martinell i Brunet designer of nearly 40 wineries The Cathedrals of the Wine and agricultural buildings throughout southern and central Catalonia Josep Vilaseca i Casanovas author of the Arc de Triomf of Barcelona gate entrance to the Exposition of 1888 and the Casa Pia Batllo of the Rambla Catalunya Gran Via Joan Rubio i Bellver pupil of Domenech i Montaner and disciple and assistant of Gaudi between 1893 and 1905 to the Sagrada Familia to the Casa Batllo and the Parc Guell He built the Casa Golferichs the Casa Pomar and the building of the Escola Industrial Salvador Valeri i Pupurull Josep Amargos i Samaranch Francesc Berenguer i Mestres Enrique Nieto Rafael Guastavino from Catalan speaking Valencia to whom Asland Cement Factory in Castellar de n Hug is attributed Domenec Boada i Piera Cristobal Cascante i Colom Ferran Cels Eduard Ferres i Puig Josep Font i Guma Josep Graner i Prat Miquel Madorell i Rius Bernardi Martorell i Puig Rafael Maso i Valenti Francesc de Paula Morera i Gatell Lluis Muncunill i Parellada who was active in Terrassa created Vapor Aymerich Amat i Jover textile factory now hosting mNACTEC National Museum of Science and Industry of Catalonia and a farmhouse small manor house called Masia Freixa Camil Oliveras i Gensana Ignasi Oms i Ponsa Pere Caselles i Tarrats Josep Maria Pericas i Morros Josep Pujol i Brull Pere Ros i Tort Manuel Vega i March Salvador Vinyals 6 nbsp The Sagrada Familia an icon of Modernisme by Antoni GaudiUNESCO World Heritage editSome of the works of Catalan Modernism have been listed by UNESCO as World Cultural Heritage By Antoni Gaudi 7 Park Guell in Barcelona Palau Guell in Barcelona Sagrada Familia in Barcelona Casa Batllo in Barcelona Casa Mila in Barcelona Casa Vicens in Barcelona Colonia Guell in Santa Coloma de Cervello By Lluis Domenech i Montaner 8 Palau de la Musica Catalana in Barcelona Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona Literature editIn literature Modernisme stood out the most in narrative The nouvelles and novels of decadent writers such as Prudenci Bertrana whose highly controversial Josafat involved a demented priest who ends up killing a prostitute Caterina Albert also known as Victor Catala author of bloody expressionistic tales of rural violence opposed to the idealisation of nature propugned by Catalan Romantics or Raimon Casellas have been highly influential upon later Catalan narrative essentially recovering a genre that had been lost due to political causes since the end of the Middle Ages Those writers often though not always show influences from Russian literature of the 19th century and also Gothic novels Still works not influenced by those sources such as Joaquim Ruyra s slice of life tales of the North Eastern Catalan coast are perhaps even more influential than that of the aforementioned authors and Rusinol s well known L auca del senyor Esteve roughly The Tale of Mr Esteve an auca is a type of illustrated broadside similar to a one sheet comic book is an ironic critique of Catalan bourgeoisie more related to ironic pre Realist Catalan costumisme In poetry Modernisme closely follows Symbolist and Parnassian poetry with poets frequently crossing the line between both tendencies or alternating between them Another important strain of Modernista poetry is Joan Maragall s Paraula viva Living word school which advocated Nietzschean vitalism and spontaneous and imperfect writing over cold and thought over poetry Although poetry was very popular with the Modernistes and there were many poets involved in the movement Maragall is the only Modernista poet who is still widely read today Modernista theatre was also important as it smashed the insubstantial regional plays that were popular in 19th century Catalonia There were two main schools of Modernista theatre social theatre which intended to change society and denounce injustice the worker stories of Ignasi Iglesias for example Els Vells The old ones the Ibsen inspired works of Joan Puig i Ferreter most notably Aigues Encantades Enchanted Waters Rusinol s antimilitaristic play L Heroe and symbolist theatre which emphasised the distance between artists and the bourgeoisie for example Rusinol s Cigales i Formigues Cicadas and Ants or El Jardi Abandonat The Abandoned Garden Linguistics editModernista ideas impelled L Avenc collaborator Pompeu Fabra to devise a new orthography for Catalan However only with the later rise of Noucentisme did his projects come to fruition and end the orthographic chaos which reigned at the time Decline editBy 1910 Modernisme had been accepted by the bourgeoisie and had pretty much turned into a fad It was around this time that Noucentista artists started to ridicule the rebel ideas of Modernisme and propelled a more bourgeois art and a more right of centre version of Catalan Nationalism which eventually rose to power with the victory of the Lliga Regionalista in 1912 Until Miguel Primo de Rivera s dictatorship suppressed all substantial public use of Catalan Noucentisme was immensely popular in Catalonia However Modernisme did have a revival of sorts during the Second Spanish Republic with avant garde writers such as Futurist Joan Salvat Papasseit earning comparisons to Joan Maragall and the spirit of Surrealists such as Josep Vicent Foix or Salvador Dali being clearly similar to the rebellion of the Modernistes what with Dali proclaiming that Catalan Romanticist Angel Guimera was a putrefact pervert However the ties between Catalan art from the 1930s and Modernisme are not that clear as said artists were not consciously attempting to continue any tradition Modernista architecture survived longer The Spanish city of Melilla in Northern Africa experienced an economic boom at the turn of the 20th century and its new bourgeoisie showed its riches by massively ordering Modernista buildings The workshops established there by Catalan architect Enrique Nieto continued producing decorations in this style even when it was out of fashion in Barcelona which results in Melilla having oddly enough the second largest concentration of Modernista works after Barcelona See also editList of Modernista buildings in Barcelona List of Gaudi buildingsReferences edit Hughes Robert 1993 Barcelona London ISBN 0 00 272167 8 p 253 Sola Morales I 1992 Arquitectura Modernista fi de segle a Barcelona Barcelona ISBN 84 252 1563 3 Mackay David Modern architecture in Barcelona 1854 1929 Barcelona 1985 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 04 25 Retrieved 2012 08 11 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link http noticias arq com mx Detalles 9955 html Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Arquitectura modernista www arteespana com es Salvador Vinyals https whc unesco org en list 320 multiple 1 amp unique number 364 Official List of the UNESCO Site Works of Antoni Gaudi 1994 2005 https whc unesco org en list 804 multiple 1 amp unique number 950 Official List of the UNESCO site Palau de la Musica Catalana and Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona 1997 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Modernisme Modernisms at the MNAC Museu Nacional d Art de Catalunya in English Modernisme Route Barcelona in English Art Nouveau in Catalonia in English Arxiu de Patrimoni Arquitectonic de Catalunya EPSEB UPC Museu del Modernisme Catala Museum of Modernism museum in Barcelona dedicated to Modernisme in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Modernisme amp oldid 1124678569, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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