Use this link to cite:
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/31609 Rituales de distinción del artista moderno: flânerie, dandismo y bohemia
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Authors
Advisors
Other responsabilities
Journal Title
Bibliographic citation
Pérez-Sánchez,Y. (2022). Rituales de distinción del artista moderno: flânerie, dandismo y bohemia. Arte, Individuo y Sociedad 34 (3), 1051-1067, https://dx.doi.org/10.5209/aris.76590
Type of academic work
Academic degree
Abstract
[Resumen]
Este texto analiza tres actitudes con las que el artista moderno, a modo de ritual, expresó
públicamente sus signos de distinción en el París decimonónico: la flânerie, el dandismo y la bohemia.
Estas actitudes lo distinguen en el escenario de una metrópoli tomada por las masas y la burguesía en
la que el artista se identifica, principalmente, con el flâneur, figura clave de la modernidad que inaugura
un nuevo tipo de mirada sobre una ciudad que, a su vez, lo observa. Así lo exponen tempranamente
Georg Simmel, Walter Benjamin o Siegfried Kracauer, además del propio Charles Baudelaire, epítome
del artista moderno y de un modo de vida continuado por célebres del “malditismo” como Paul Verlaine
y Arthur Rimbaud. El análisis de estas actitudes se ilustra con algunas obras litográficas, fundamentalmente de Honoré Daumier y Paul Gavarni, cuya perspectiva aguda y sarcástica revela algunos de los
rasgos claves de la vida metropolitana y de sus tipos más característicos
[Abstract] The text focuses on three attitudes through which the modern artist, in a ritualistic manner, publicly expressed distinction in nineteenth-century Paris: flânerie, dandyism and bohemianism. These attitudes distinguish him on the stage of a metropolis taken over by the masses and the bourgeoisie in which the artist identifies himself, mainly, with the flâneur, a key figure of modernity who creates a new type of gaze on a city which, in turn, also observed him. So was analyzed by Georg Simmel, Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer, as by Charles Baudelaire himself, the epitome of the modern artist and of a way of life continued by accursed poets such as Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud. The analysis of these attitudes is supported by lithographic works, mostly signed by Honoré Daumier and Paul Gavarni, where some of the key features of metropolitan life and its most characteristic types are revealed from an acute and sarcastic perspective.
[Abstract] The text focuses on three attitudes through which the modern artist, in a ritualistic manner, publicly expressed distinction in nineteenth-century Paris: flânerie, dandyism and bohemianism. These attitudes distinguish him on the stage of a metropolis taken over by the masses and the bourgeoisie in which the artist identifies himself, mainly, with the flâneur, a key figure of modernity who creates a new type of gaze on a city which, in turn, also observed him. So was analyzed by Georg Simmel, Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer, as by Charles Baudelaire himself, the epitome of the modern artist and of a way of life continued by accursed poets such as Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud. The analysis of these attitudes is supported by lithographic works, mostly signed by Honoré Daumier and Paul Gavarni, where some of the key features of metropolitan life and its most characteristic types are revealed from an acute and sarcastic perspective.
Description
Editor version
Rights
Atribución 3.0 España








