Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Teoría del arte de vanguardia

Rate this book
Excerpt from book's Prologue: "It is my intention in these pages to study avant-garde art as a historical concept, a center of tendencies and ideas. I want to outline its anatomy or biology: the aim is diagnosis and not, as with severe adversaries and the more indulgent would-be-reformers, therapeutic treatment. In one sense, this study means to be a vivisection or a spectroscopic analysis. I use these figurative terms to emphasize that this investigation is scientific in character, not practical or critical, and also to call attention to its synthetic and analytic method. Avant-garde art, in this essay, will be considered both as a manifold and as a general phenomenon. In this case of a phenomenon belonging to the history of art, this means treating it not so much as an aesthetic fact as a sociological one."

Paperback

First published January 1, 1962

8 people are currently reading
276 people want to read

About the author

Renato Poggioli

20 books3 followers
Renato Poggioli (Florence 1907-1963) was an Italian literary critic and specialist in Russian literature. He is known for his book Teoria dell'arte d'avanguardia of 1962, translated into English as The Theory of the Avant-garde. In it he argued for the strict connection of the avant garde with the legacy of Romanticism.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
18 (19%)
4 stars
38 (41%)
3 stars
26 (28%)
2 stars
6 (6%)
1 star
4 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Sachin.
Author 9 books63 followers
March 24, 2008
One of the most influential sociological study of the phenomenon of `avant-garde'in arts. It draws from well known analysis by Jose Ortega Gassett' The Dehumanization of Art'.
Recommended for anyone trying to understand the social forces and its relation to the experimental art.
Profile Image for erin.
54 reviews3 followers
April 22, 2025
i was casually re-reading this for a bit. like a paragraph or 2 a day or so. it was part the curriculum for my philosophy of art class way back when at app. it was like the only class i rly fucked with in college & i got a 96 in it. i wrote a paper abt fiona apple & philip glass being opposites in regards to expressionism i think. anyway.. when i found this on a stoop last yr, it called to me. tbh i think finding it & rereading it was the final push to get me to transfer & resume online classes.

it was fun to read it again with my more established adult mind. (i’m even dumber ! jkjk) i still have my qualms w it tho. it’s no secret the translation sucks ass. another thing, it doesn’t lean into the headiness of avant garde’s influence but really just definining it as a rote timeframe epoch rather than an essence or sociological mindhive ideal. but still an interesting read nonetheless.

it’s one of those books where u sit back & be like "do i agree ? does this frustrate me? do i see the argument ? am i enjoying myself ?" also, it’s suitable to pace around yr apt & read some sections out loud.. during a lunch break while working from home having the back n forth footsteps provoke yr neighbor below to such an extent they repeatedly hit the ceiling with a broom to get u to stfu bc yr cracked out on too much caffeine.

i also distinctly remember reading this while listening to rimbaudian n burial lofi bc i was too scattered to listen to shit with distinct words. that’s how u know it hit too
Profile Image for Ellen Enderle.
1 review28 followers
September 23, 2015
Anyone who has a sincere interest in the the expression of 'the avant-garde' in the arts should thoroughly enjoy reading this book. The author has a comprehensive historical understanding of such movements, as well as keen insight into the possible motivations, functions, and significance of the avant-garde. Lastly, a quote by Gabriel Désiré Laverdant from the book:

"Art, the expression of society, manifests in its highest soaring, the most advanced social tendencies: it is the forerunner and the revealer. Therefore, to know whether art worthily fulfills its proper mission as initiator, whether the artist is truly of the avant-garde, one must know where Humanity is going, know what the destiny of the human race is...Along with the hymn to happiness, the dolorous despairing ode...To lay bare all the brutalities, all the filth, which are at the base of our society."
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.