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         Futurism:     more books (100)
  1. India: A Study in Futurism by Shyam Ratna (editor) Gupta, 1976
  2. Futurism of the Engineers of Architecture As Anticipation of the Past by Ulrich Horndash, 1992-01
  3. Educational futurism in pursuance of survival, by John D Pulliam, 1974
  4. Theatrical Gestures of Belgian Modernism: Dada, Surrealism, Futurism, and Pure Plastic in the Twentieth Century Belgian Theatre (Belgian Francophone Library, Vol. 14)
  5. Futurism and the international avant-garde: Essays
  6. Bruno Jasienski: His Evolution from Futurism to Socialist Realism (Library of the Canadian Review of Comparative Literature) by Nina Kolesnikoff, 1982-12
  7. CUBISM/FUTURISM by MAX KOZLOFF, 1974
  8. Is it art? post-impressionism, futurism, cubism, by John Nilsen Laurvik, 1913
  9. Mayakovsky and Futurism, 1917-21 (Stockholm Studies in Russian Literature) by Bengt Jangfeldt, 1976-04
  10. Futurism and Dadaism / José Pierre [translated from the French by Joan White. Series edited by Claude Schaeffner] by Jose (1927-) Pierre, 1969
  11. Futurism and the Arts
  12. Futurism and its place in the development of modern poetry: A comparative study and anthology by Zbigniew Folejewski, 1980
  13. Benedetta Capa Marinetti: Queen of Futurism by Franca Zoccoli, 2003-05
  14. Futurism by Sylvia Martin, 2005-06-01

41. Futurisme
Pr©sentation et historique de ce mouvement cin©matographique des ann©es 20. Films recommand©s, textes et liens.
http://cours.cegep-st-jerome.qc.ca/530-gjb-p.l/futurism.htm
Futurisme
Accueil
Remonter Débuts Burlesque [ Futurisme ] Expressionnisme Surréalisme Nouvelle vague Cinéma hongkongais ... Aujourd'hui Traits caractéristiques
  • Fortement lié à la technologie, aux progrès scientifiques; Glorification de la machine et de la ville; Mouvement engagé, influence politique et sociale; Intégration de la quatrième dimension : l'espace-temps; Représentations du mouvement, du dynamisme de la vie moderne.
Période clef : 1904 - 1914 en Italie, France et Russie principalement. Artistes Le futurisme et le cinéma Le cinéma étant un média essentiellement technologique, il est tout à fait naturel que le mouvement futuriste ait exercé une influence considérable sur lui. C'est dans les années '20 et surtout en Russie que le mouvement aura la plus grande influence sur l'art cinématographique. Influencés par l'énergie et la vitalité des peintures et sculptures futuristes des Italiens, les Russes cherchent à traduire cette énergie au cinéma via un outil particulier : le MONTAGE. Les expériences de montage menées par Lev Kuleshov (ou Koulechov), Sergei Eisenstein, réalisateur du Cuirassé Potemkin (1925), et particulièrement Dziga Vertov sont les premières à explorer la naissance d'un message dans la juxtaposition d'images ayant aucun lien entre eux, un aspect du montage que l'on nomme aujourd'hui

42. FUTURISM
futurism. KEY DATES19091944. An Italian avant-garde art movement that took speed, futurism was unique in that it was a self-invented art movement.
http://www.artmovements.co.uk/futurism.htm
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document.write(getTableBegin('Http://www.artistportfolio.net/images/bar16_gg.gif','Art Movements','valign=top height=200')) FUTURISM KEY DATES:1909-1944 An Italian avant-garde art movement that took speed, technology and modernity as its inspiration, Futurism portrayed the dynamic character of 20th century life, glorified war and the machine age, and favoured the growth of Fascism. The movement was at its strongest from 1909, when Filippo Marinetti's first manifesto of Futurism appeared, until the end of World War One. Futurism was unique in that it was a self-invented art movement. The idea of Futurism came first, followed by a fanfare of publicity; it was only afterwards that artists could find a means to express it. Marinetti's manifesto, printed on the front page of Le Figaro, was bombastic and inflammatory in tone - "set fire to the library shelves... flood the museums" - suggesting that he was more interested in shocking the public than exploring Futurism's themes. Painters in the movement did have a serious intent beyond Marinetti's bombast, however. Their aim was to portray sensations as a "synthesis of what one remembers and of what one sees", and to capture what they called the 'force lines' of objects.

43. Guggenheim Collection - Movement - Futurism
futurism works. futurism. In a stylistic idiom that integrated some of the techniques of Cubism and Divisionism, the Futurists glorified the energy and
http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/movement_works_Futurism_0.html
Futurism In a stylistic idiom that integrated some of the techniques of Cubism and Divisionism, the Futurists glorified the energy and speed of modern life together with the dynamism and violence of the new technological society.
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Kazimir Malevich, Morning in the Village after Snowstorm,
Giacomo Balla, Abstract Speed + Sound,
Natalia Goncharova, Cats (rayist percep.[tion] in rose, black, and yellow),
Umberto Boccioni, Dynamism of a Speeding Horse + Houses,
Raymond Duchamp-Villon, The Horse, 1914 (cast ca. 1930)
Albert Gleizes, Woman with Animals (Madame Raymond Duchamp-Villon), completed by February 1914

44. Free-CliffNotes.com - Eschatology Of The End: According To Revelations
futurism, Preterism, Historicism, and Idealism defined with verse references and commentary included.
http://www.free-cliffnotes.com/data/gb/rcj79.shtml
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45. Guggenheim Collection - Glossary - Futurism
futurism Artists and poets affiliated with futurism include Giacomo Balla, futurism, however, was more prevalent among Russia’s poets than its
http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/glossary_Futurism.html
Futurism Italy, 1908
In a stylistic idiom that integrated some of the techniques of Cubism more Giacomo Balla Umberto Boccioni , Carlo Carrà, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (the movement’s founder), Luigi Russolo, and Gino Severini . Balla led a second generation of Italian Futurists, including Fortunato Depero, Gerardo Dottori, and Enrico Prampolini, in the 1920s and 1930s.
Almost concomitantly with Italian Futurism, a Russian version of Futurism developed under the leadership of Kazimir Malevich , who described most of his work from 1912 to 1915 as “Cubo-Futurist.” This Cubist fragmentation of space allied to the Futurist simultaneity of shifting forms was also taken up briefly by Liubov Popova and other Russian artists. Futurism, however, was more prevalent among Russia’s poets than its painters.

46. Church History Is Bible Prophecy Fulfilled...the Protestant Historicist Interpre
Historicist interpretation of prophecies, Rapture, futurism, other doctrines, and church history.
http://www.historicist.com/
Isaac Newton Protestant History 3 Interpretations Daniel ... Previous Page I have told you before it come to pass, that, when it come to pass you might believe. John 14:29 Isaac Newton Protestant History 3 Interpretations Daniel ... Mission Statement
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US State Department Says New Testement is 'AntiSemetic'? by Rev Ted Pike
Trying to Force the Rapture
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The Bush Administration: Globalist Jacobins
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A Jacobian in Chief Exporting the French Revolution to the World

by Claes G. Ryn
The Bush Administration: Globalist Jacobins
by William Grigg
War Without End-Bush Proclaims Jacobin Crusade
Paul Roberts
The Rapture Cult- Path of Death
By Carol Wolman
Balanced View of Popes
Part Two by Sherman H. Skolnick False Prophet Hal Lindsay Wants War on Iran by Uri Dowbenko Gods for the Godless by Tupper Saussy Christian Zionism Defined by Stephen Sizer A History of Christian Zionism by Stephen Sizer Christian Zionism from 911-strike.com

47. Futurism (art) - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
futurism was a 20th century art movement. Although a nascent futurism can been seen surfacing throughout the very early years of that century,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futurism_(art)
Futurism (art)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
This article is about the art movement, futurism. Futurism is also another word for Future studies Futurism was a 20th century art movement. Although a nascent Futurism can been seen surfacing throughout the very early years of that century, the essay Entwurf einer neuen „sthetik der Tonkunst (Sketch of a New Aesthetic of Music) by the Italian composer Ferruccio Busoni is sometimes claimed as its true jumping-off point. Futurism was a largely Italian movement, although it also had adherents in other countries, most notably Russia The Futurists explored every medium of art, including painting sculpture poetry theatre ... music and even gastronomy . The Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti was the first among them to produce a manifesto of their artistic philosophy in his Manifesto of Futurism ), first released in Milan and published in the French paper Le Figaro February 20 ). Marinetti summed up the major principles of the Futurists, including a passionate loathing of ideas from the past, especially political and artistic traditions. He and others also espoused a love of speed technology and violence . The car, the plane, the industrial town were all legendary for the Futurists, because they represented the technological triumph of man over

48. Futurism - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
futurism may refer to. Future studies, the philosophical or academic study of the medium to Retrieved from http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/futurism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futurism
Futurism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Futurism may refer to: This is a disambiguation page — a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page. Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Futurism Categories Disambiguation Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox In other languages

49. FUTURISM
In the 1920 s and 1930 s the term futurism was loosely used to describe a wide variety futurism was the first deliberately organized, selfconscious art
http://www.deluxxe.com/futurism/futintr1.html
FUTURISM
In the 1920's and 1930's the term Futurism was loosely used to describe a wide variety of aggressively modern styles in art and literature. The Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti coined the term in 1909 for a movement founded and led by himself.
Futurist Performance
FROM THE MANIFESTO OF THE FUTURIST SYNTHETIC THEATRE
    The dramatic 'synthesis', which will take the place of the traditional play, will be 'autonomous, unreal, and alogical'. Although elements drawn from reality will be used, they will be combined according to whim, and the synthesis will resemble nothing but itself. With color, forms, sounds and noises, it will, like the works of Futurist painters and musicians, assault the nerves.... The spectators will be made to 'forget the monotony of everyday life' through a 'labyrinth of sensations' characterized by the most exasperating originality combined in unexpected ways. Anticipating the Surrealists, the Futurists declared that discoveries of the subconscious must be brought to the stage. The entertainment would 'symphonize' the feelings of the public, exploring and revealing those feelings in every possible way.
  • Signed by: Filippo Marinetti, Bruno Corra and Emilio Settimelli (1915...Milan)

50. Cadre.sjsu.edu/switch/sound/articles/wendt/folder6
futurism artists and art theartists.orgfuturism art movement / style, art and artists, Information about futurism and the artists involved.
http://cadre.sjsu.edu/switch/sound/articles/wendt/folder6/ng63.htm

51. Futurism
Kim Scarborough s futurism Index has a wider selection of manifestoes, To read; Günter Berghaus, futurism and Politics Between Anarchist Rebellion and
http://cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/notebooks/futurism.html
Notebooks
Futurism
05 May 1997 17:41 No, no, not mumbo-jumbo like Toffler or Spengler; I mean the modernist artistic movement founded in 1909 by F. T. Marinetti in friends; the first artists to really, consciously and with immense self-promotion embrace technology and constant change and shock and all that good stuff. They were the first cyberpunks, the first Discordians , and (perhaps not coincidentally) some of the first Fascists. The original (pre-WWI) Futurists were also good artists. One of my works-in-glacial-progress argues that `` we are all Futurists now '' - all of us on the Net, anyhow.
    Recommended:
  • Giacomo Balla was a good painter, but his pupils, Federigo Severini and (especially) Umberto Boccioni were even better. H. N. Abrams issued the catalog of a Boccioni retrospective a few years ago, and if anyone is looking to drop about $150 on a gift for me, that would do nicely.
  • Reyner Banham has some good chapters on both the general character of the movement, and its influence on modern architecture , in Theory and Design in the First Machine Age
  • Igor Golomshtok

52. Technorati Tag: Futurism
futurism, in its early 20th century sense, was an art movement, as I recently discovered (see I looked it up, and indeed, futurism was an art movement.
http://www.technorati.com/tags/futurism
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  • 53. FutureWire - Futurism And Emerging Technology
    An examination of futurism/futurology, emerging technologies, future trends, disruptive innovations and all their unintended consequences.
    http://futurewire.blogspot.com/
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    Wednesday, September 21, 2005
    Broadband Video Milestone: Viacom May Buy iFilm
    In a sign that broadband video content is becoming a mainstream business, media giant Viacom is working on a deal to purchase iFilm . The reported price of the deal is $50 million.
    In the short run, iFilm might not seem to be a profitable acquisition for Viacom. But as the owner of MTV and VH1 (among many other TV entities), Viacom could certainly make use of iFilm's presence to claim an early stake in broadband, reaching out to new audiences who might be more inclined to watch video via the Internet than through traditional TV.
    Source: PaidContent.org

    54. Futurism
    futurism was founded by the Italian writer Filippo Tommaso Marinetti when he futurism was a refreshing contrast to the sentimentality of Romanticism.
    http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0011984.html
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    Or search the encyclopaedia: Futurism Avant-garde art movement founded in 1909 that celebrated the dynamism of the modern world. It was chiefly an Italian movement and was mainly expressed in painting, but it also embraced other arts, including literature and music, and it had extensive influence outside Italy, particularly in Russia. In Italy the movement virtually died out during World War I, but in Russia it continued to flourish into the 1920s. Futurism was founded by the Italian writer Filippo Tommaso Marinetti when he published a manifesto attacking established cultural values in the Parisian newspaper Le Figaro cubism and the bright, broken colours of neo-Impressionism were major influences. Usually the Futurists took their subjects from modern city life, machines, and power, and this influenced cubists and constructivists. The Futurists had numerous exhibitions of their work (in 1912 their first group exhibition travelled to various major European cities, including Amsterdam, Berlin, London, Paris, and Vienna), and they also spread their ideas through public meetings and other events skilfully staged by Marinetti. Although the war ended the movement as a significant force, it had already had a strong influence, for example on

    55. Sanford & A Lifetime Of Color: Study Art
    futurism developed in Italy and Russia in the early 1900s. futurism was aggressive and inflammatory, and the art of this era was intended to anger and
    http://www.sanford-artedventures.com/study/g_futurism.html
    Glossary Term: Futurism
    Futurism developed in Italy and Russia in the early 1900s. An Italian poet, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, named the style to emphasize speed, power, change and innovation in art. He wanted art to reflect the power of the machine, which he felt was more applicable to the times than the static and irrelevant art of the past. The invention of the automobile, a machine with power and speed, was a symbol of this movement's interest in technology. Futurist painters adopted many of the techniques of the Cubists , but while the Cubists favored still lifes and portraits, Futurists portrayed speeding cars, cyclists, dancers and sciences from urban life. Futurism was a proponent of violence and conflict. It called for the destruction of institutions such as libraries and museums. Futurism was aggressive and inflammatory, and the art of this era was intended to anger and inspire controversy. Some well-known artists of this period were Umberto Boccioni, Carlo Carra and Gino Severini.
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    56. Futurism
    futurism, a unique phenomenon to the modern era, not only found its roots Never the less, the concepts in The Founding and Manifesto of futurism seemed
    http://www-camil.music.uiuc.edu/Projects/EAM/Futurism.html
    Futurism Futurism, a unique phenomenon to the modern era, not only found its roots in many of the arts, but also and most persuasively in politics. The Futurists were the first artists of this century who pledged themselves to ideological activism and devoted their energies and talents to converting he masses to that ideal, rather than to formalizing and promoting their individual artistic merits." The Futurist artistic movement began not through a series of works as most other artistic movements do, but through a series of manifests. Marinetti's bellicose manifesto generated interest and brought Italy into the Twentieth century. His militant views on politics and is visionary artistic mind created a public demand for a forward thinking society. Many artists were drawn to Marinetti's empassioned statements; others only in spirit. Some artists pointed out that there was nothing new in the Futurist movement, while although it was most likely true, did not dissuade its followers Marinetti turned his political efforts to reacquiring land in the northern portion of Italy that had been claimed by Austria. He was again rewarded and in 1915, Italy won back the rights to most of these northern territories. When World War I started shortly after, the Futurists all enlisted. Some of them, such as Luigi Russolo, became officers in the army and became highly decorated soldiers. At the end of the war, the Futurists returned to their promotion of their forward thinking philosophies. These interested a forward-thinking, young Fascist named Benito Mussolini. It was Mussolini who became one of the most politically active in conjunction with the positions of the Futurists, during the years 1918 to 1920. After the successful reintegration of the position of the Futurists in society, Mussolini used his political clout to silence them. The discarded Futurists became embittered by the political situation, and with drew them selves from political activism.

    57. DODONA: Human Biodiversity Discussion Forum - Futurism
    DODONA Human Biodiversity Discussion Forum « futurism ». Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register. Aug 12, 2005, 1154am
    http://dodona.proboards35.com/index.cgi?board=futurism

    58. CUBO-FUTURISM
    This site was designed to present the developments in Russian painting from its beginnings to the twentieth century. It includes background information and
    http://www.rollins.edu/Foreign_Lang/Russian/cubofut.html
    Cubo-futurism Cubo-futurism developed in Russia around 1910. It was essentially a synthetic style, a reinterpretation of the French Cubism (Picasso and Braque) and Italian Futurism (Marinetti, Boccioni) popular at that time in Europe, combined with a strong Neo-primitivist belief in the dynamic possibilities of color and line. The Cubo-futurist movement attracted such talented artists as Goncharova, Larionov, Popova, Malevich, Tatlin, and many others. In Russian interpretation, sometimes there is no significant difference between a Cubist and Cubo-futurist painting. Both feature bold colors, and the fragmentation of the objects on the canvas' surface. Perhaps Cubo-futurism places more emphasis on movement and action; it is also often characterized by the inclusion of various letters, even complete words, in the composition. Goncharova's The Cyclist (1912-13), Popova's Italian Still-Life (1914) and Seated Figure (ca. 1915), as well as Malevich's An Englishman in Moscow (1914) and The Knife Grinder (1912) are not only good examples of the painterly possibilities opened up by the Cubo-futurist style but also excellent illustrations of various artistic approaches to it.

    59. Literary Encyclopedia: Futurism
    futurism (19091939). Places Italy, Russia, Continental Europe. futurism was first announced to the world in February 1909 with the appearance in the
    http://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=450

    60. Cyberfuturism.com - Coming In 2k2

    http://www.cyberfuturism.com/

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