In the early 1890s, Jules Lévy organised a series of artistic exhibitions under the title of Les Arts Incohérents. Affiliated with Montmartre cabaret culture, the events lampooned the conventions of the Parisian salons and the conventions and institutions of the fine arts. This article explores the importance of the figure of the blank in a selection of art exhibited by the Incohérents. Adopting a word-and-image-based approach, and drawing on theories of comedy and laughter, the article shows how the Incohérents' incipient avant-gardism interrogates the limits of the different arts and points to a novel inflection of humour in the period
The article examines the work of Flaubert, in which the most difficult problems are posed - social, ...
The article presents the results of a search for aesthetically comic elements in contemporary archit...
In the course of print history only a few successful models of image and word-alliances (e.g., comic...
In the center of this article, it is going to be a literary movement which was named absurdism, thea...
Cet article explore la manière dont texte et contexte interagissent dans la nouvelle “The Triumphs o...
‘Beggars Teeth’ is the title of an ongoing research project investigating the limits of Expressionis...
Humour was at the core of the spatial imaginary of the emerging French avant-garde of the 1880s. But...
Eighteenth and nineteenth century philosophers took interest in humour and, in particular, humorous ...
This essay considers humour and contemporary art practice as cultural forces, through which the expr...
This article studies the role of typographical blanks in four practices of fiction. In reference to ...
In his copy of the published text of Artaud the Mômo, Artaud added a note for a future edition that ...
The article, by Roberta Mullini from p. 11 to p. 23, discusses British Renaissance theories of laugh...
Si c’est le futurisme et le Dadaïsme qui sont mis de l’avant dans la plupart des publications sur l’...
The book examines the genre of Salon caricatural, a special kind of Salon criticism which, made of r...
In this article, some modern theories of humour are applied to the Breton lawyer and writer of prose...
The article examines the work of Flaubert, in which the most difficult problems are posed - social, ...
The article presents the results of a search for aesthetically comic elements in contemporary archit...
In the course of print history only a few successful models of image and word-alliances (e.g., comic...
In the center of this article, it is going to be a literary movement which was named absurdism, thea...
Cet article explore la manière dont texte et contexte interagissent dans la nouvelle “The Triumphs o...
‘Beggars Teeth’ is the title of an ongoing research project investigating the limits of Expressionis...
Humour was at the core of the spatial imaginary of the emerging French avant-garde of the 1880s. But...
Eighteenth and nineteenth century philosophers took interest in humour and, in particular, humorous ...
This essay considers humour and contemporary art practice as cultural forces, through which the expr...
This article studies the role of typographical blanks in four practices of fiction. In reference to ...
In his copy of the published text of Artaud the Mômo, Artaud added a note for a future edition that ...
The article, by Roberta Mullini from p. 11 to p. 23, discusses British Renaissance theories of laugh...
Si c’est le futurisme et le Dadaïsme qui sont mis de l’avant dans la plupart des publications sur l’...
The book examines the genre of Salon caricatural, a special kind of Salon criticism which, made of r...
In this article, some modern theories of humour are applied to the Breton lawyer and writer of prose...
The article examines the work of Flaubert, in which the most difficult problems are posed - social, ...
The article presents the results of a search for aesthetically comic elements in contemporary archit...
In the course of print history only a few successful models of image and word-alliances (e.g., comic...