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Organizing Independence: The Artists' Federation of the Paris Commune and Its Legacy, 1871-1889
Hardback

Organizing Independence: The Artists’ Federation of the Paris Commune and Its Legacy, 1871-1889

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One need only remember the role of Jacques Louis David in the French Revolution of 1789 and the quasi-official status of art in French national history to understand the prominence of art and artists in the Federation des Artistes of the Paris Commune of 1871. Focusing on artists’ political activities rather than their artistic efforts, Gonzalo J. Sanchez Jr. examines the artists’ assembly formed in the Commune, recounts the program and activities of the group and its members, and charts their fate after the fall of the Commune and during the ensuing repression of the Communards. Departing from the tradition established by Karl Marx, which views the Commune as a precursor of revolutionary socialism, the author portrays the artists’ federation as a complex mixture of conservative and reformist elements, situated at a historical crossroads. These artists-including Gustave Courbet, Jules Hereau, Edouard Lockroy, Jules Dalou, and Leon and August Ottins-were part of a tradition of artists’ assemblies dating to 1789 even as they argued for radical change in artists’ social status and autonomy. Many of the reforms they advocated were realized during the Third Republic, making the federation a social and political, if not an aesthetic, precursor of modernism.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Country
United States
Date
1 April 1997
Pages
245
ISBN
9780803242555

One need only remember the role of Jacques Louis David in the French Revolution of 1789 and the quasi-official status of art in French national history to understand the prominence of art and artists in the Federation des Artistes of the Paris Commune of 1871. Focusing on artists’ political activities rather than their artistic efforts, Gonzalo J. Sanchez Jr. examines the artists’ assembly formed in the Commune, recounts the program and activities of the group and its members, and charts their fate after the fall of the Commune and during the ensuing repression of the Communards. Departing from the tradition established by Karl Marx, which views the Commune as a precursor of revolutionary socialism, the author portrays the artists’ federation as a complex mixture of conservative and reformist elements, situated at a historical crossroads. These artists-including Gustave Courbet, Jules Hereau, Edouard Lockroy, Jules Dalou, and Leon and August Ottins-were part of a tradition of artists’ assemblies dating to 1789 even as they argued for radical change in artists’ social status and autonomy. Many of the reforms they advocated were realized during the Third Republic, making the federation a social and political, if not an aesthetic, precursor of modernism.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Country
United States
Date
1 April 1997
Pages
245
ISBN
9780803242555