30-day no hassle returns & FREE SHIPPING on orders over $50

Skip to Main Content »

Search Site

Inspiration Monday: FUTURISM

Posted on November 9th, 2009 by Becky // 3 Comments »

I picked this book up at one of the best used bookstores I’ve ever visited, ABCD in Camden Maine (though my Great Uncle Frank Piskor, a huge bibliophile, used to say they had “New York prices.”). It’s a MoMA book from 1961, and Uncle Frank was right; it was $6.50 new, and $75 used forty years later. I’m going to let the jacket sum up Futurism for you because I would use up all of my blogging hours for the month trying to do it myself and I would not do half as good a job:

The Futurist artists…set out to create an art as exhilarating as Marinetti’s promise. They translated the kinetic rhythms and the confused, intense sensations of modern life into potent visual form, creating works of art of extraordinary emotional impact. The Futurists’ approach to art, their manifestos and demonstrations set a pattern for many art movements which followed, such as Constructivism, Dada, and Surrealism…and the sympathy between certain Futurist procedures and current endeavors is largely responsible for the growing interest in Futurism.”

-Joshua C. Taylor

The Futurists looked to the past to rebel against it than to be inspired by it, and they had a tinge of anarchy running through their movement. Alright, enough art history, think about what was going on in the 19-teens and you’ll get it. Onto the inspiration of color, shape, movement, and composed confusion:

Severini: The Boulevard 1910

Boccioni: The Street Pavers 1911

Balla: Mercury Passing Before the Sun as Seen Through a Telescope 1914

Balla: Iridescent Interpretation 1912

Balla: Girl Running on a Balcony 1912

Boccioni: Iron Man. Just Kidding! Unique Forms of Continuity in Space 1913

Carra: “Free-Word” Painting (Patriotic Celebration) 1914

Boccioni: The Calvary Charge 1914

Hmmm, O.K., so the late fifties/early sixties are the time of the “current endeavors” Taylor alludes to. That makes total sense when you think about the art scene in the sixties and beyond. I’m seeing a lot of inspiration here for Jim Dine and Robert Indiana and Andy Warhol. Think of whatever Cooper is hanging in his office on Mad Men, think of how the space race would have effected art the way the industrial revolution and speeding cars and airplanes did decades earlier.

It makes me wonder what kind of art will come out of this tumultuous time in history. We’ve seen the architecture, we’re seeing how the fear of a crashing plane affects design, how security concerns keep campuses from planting shrubs, how we memorialize heroes and events. How are tumultuous times and technology and all of the new ways of presenting media and communicating affecting art today? Please tell me what you think as it’s kind of blowing my mind just thinking about it at them moment.


Filed in Art and Artists, Color Palettes, Design Books, Design Press, modern inspiration  |  3 Comments

Responses

  1. 31everything says:

    November 9th, 2009 at 7:33 am (#)

    Not really my type of art, but the “free-word” painting is pretty cool :) My fav of the ones you posted. Thanks for sharing.

  2. Kit Pollard says:

    November 9th, 2009 at 4:00 pm (#)

    Awesome post. I can’t even wrap my head around how current events and capabilities are influencing art and design – I guess I need the benefit of hindsight to see stuff like that.

    I have been kind of into the Futurists lately, though. There was an article in Slate last summer about the 100th anniversary of the Futurist Manifesto. I can’t get behind the philosophy, but I do like the art, especially for where it fits in the larger context of 20th century art and I’m drawn to the way they connected what they believed to a whole way of life and a whole culture.

    Plus, they wrote a crazy cookbook, and I think that is SO cool.

  3. Becky says:

    November 9th, 2009 at 4:57 pm (#)

    No way, I had no idea they wrote a cookbook!

    Isn’t there a band out there called The Futurists. I think I acutally downloaded their CD because some celebrity I thought would have good musical taste told me to (yes, I’m a robot), and then I hated it, mostly because I am WAY too old and just need to stick with old Duran Duran and Depeche Mode.

Leave a Response