Kurt Schwitters Merzbau: The Cathedral of Erotic Misery (Building Studies, 5)
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Average customer review:Product Description
German artist Kurt Schwitters began constructing the Merzbau, a combination of collage, sculpture, and architecture, in a corner of his studio in Hannover, Germany in 1920. Also called the Cathedral of Erotic Misery, this was Schwitters's private world. It eventually took over his entire living quarters, the apartment above, and part of the yard, and was divided into rooms-the Biedermeier Room, the de Stijl Room, the Goethe Cave, the Mondrian Cave, and the Mies Cave, among others. It was destroyed during an Allied bombing raid in 1943.
Although the Merzbau is of essential importance in understanding the early Modern Movement, this is the first in-depth study in English of this structure. Elizabeth Burns Gamard discusses its physical evolution and its significance within the artist's oeuvre. She also investigates its larger relation to German Expressionism and romanticism and to critical thought of the time. This book offers an in-depth analysis of a single structure through original documents, drawings, and critical examination of the design process.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #977952 in Books
- Published on: 2000-04-01
- Released on: 2009-02-22
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 192 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Library Journal
This graduate-level discourse on Kurt Schwitters (1887$1948) suggests that there is a hermeneutic content to the artist!s works. Highly regarded author Gamard (architecture, Tulane Univ.), who deploys a moderately academic writing style, believes that Schwitters!s best work was his famous construction in Hannover of the house-sized Merzbau, begun in 1923 and destroyed in 1943. The KdeE (as the Merzbau was also called) was an environment that grew out of Schwitters!s studio in his family!s apartment and adopted utopian and alchemistic themes. Over the years, Schwitters endlessly transformed the space into a cathedral-like series of grottoes, collages, and sections named Cave of the Sex, Lust Murderers, and Cave of the Deprecated Heroes, among others. The book contains 50 black-and-white illustrations, but they do not support Gamard!s argument regarding the superiority of the KdeE. Suited to Schwitters specialists and the sophisticated follower of modern European art, this challenging work is for specialized academic or large public collections."Mary Hamel-Schwulst, Towson Univ., MD
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
Well-researched study, Gamard's evaluation of Schwitters' artwork clarifies its relevance to architecture. -- Architecture Magazine, June 2000
Customer Reviews
Too many inaccuracies
This study of Kurt Schwitters's Merzbau is very disappointing, particularly coming from a Professor of Architecture, as the largely unexplored architectural aspects of the Merzbau have in general been ignored. The first part of the book is interesting insofar as it provides an introduction to the post-modernist aspects of Schwitters's work, but when it comes to more detail about Schwitters and the Merzbau, there are far too many inaccuracies. For instance, Professor Gamard is unsure about the exact location of the main sections of the Merzbau (placing it both on the ground and second floor of Schwitters' home) and is vague on Weimar history, stating that Weimar was the capital of the Weimar Republic. In all, there is far too much in this book which is plain theorising and which has no substantial factual basis.




