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Carl Einstein (1885–1940)

Auteur de Bebuquin ou les dilettantes du miracle

41+ oeuvres 162 utilisateurs 0 critiques 2 Favoris

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Comprend les noms: Carl Einstein

Séries

Œuvres de Carl Einstein

La sculpture nègre (1920) 25 exemplaires
Die Kunst des 20. Jahrhunderts (1988) 11 exemplaires
Die Fabrikation der Fiktionen (1973) 8 exemplaires
Werke Bd. 1 1908 - 1918 (1980) 7 exemplaires
Europa Almanach 1925 (1984) 6 exemplaires
Afrikanische Legenden (1989) 5 exemplaires
Georges Braque (2002) 4 exemplaires
Correspondance 1921-1939 (1993) 3 exemplaires
Negro Sculpture (2016) 2 exemplaires
Ethnologie de l'art moderne (1993) 2 exemplaires
Werke Bd. 3 1929-1940 (1985) 1 exemplaire
Escultura Negra (2021) 1 exemplaire
Lo snob e altri saggi (1985) 1 exemplaire
A ARTE DO SÉCULO 20 (2022) 1 exemplaire
Picasso y el cubismo (2013) 1 exemplaire
Vivantes figures (2019) 1 exemplaire
Gesammelte Werke 1 exemplaire
Afrikanische Plastik 1 exemplaire
1919 - 1928. (Bd. 2) (1988) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Golden Bomb: Phantastic German Expressionist Stories (1993) — Contributeur — 33 exemplaires
Duitse expressionistische verhalen (1966) — Auteur — 9 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Einstein, Karl
Autres noms
Urian, Savine Ree
Date de naissance
1885-04-26
Date de décès
1940-07-05
Lieu de sépulture
Coarraze, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Germany
Lieu de naissance
Neuwied, Rheinland-Pfalz, Deutschland
Lieu du décès
Pau, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Cause du décès
suicide
Lieux de résidence
Berlin, Germany
Paris, France
Études
Friedrich-Wilhelm University
Professions
art historian
writer
art critic
essayist
Soldier, Spanish Civil War
Relations
Simmel, Georg (teacher)
Wölfflin, Heinrich (teacher)
Bataille, Georges (co-editor)
Leiris, Michel (co-editor)
Pfemfert, Franz (brother-in-law)
Grosz, George (friend)
Courte biographie
Carl Einstein, né Karl, was born to a Jewish family in Neuwied, Germany. His parents were Sophie and Daniel Einstein. His younger sister Hedwig would become a well-known concert pianist and married sculptor Benno Elkan. In 1904, he moved to Berlin, where he studied philosophy and art history at Friedrich-Wilhelm University with Georg Simmel and Heinrich Wölfflin. In 1907, he visited Paris and learned about the works of artists such as Picasso, Braque and Gris. On his return, he started writing and joined the radical circle around Franz Pfemfert and his magazine Die Aktion. In 1913, he married Maria Ramm, making him Pfemfert's brother-in-law. Prior to World War I, Einstein published a novella and essays on art, politics, and literature, primarily in Die Aktion. He changed the spelling of his first name to Carl, and also used the pseudonym Savine Ree Urian. His book Negerplastik, published in 1915, established him as an important art critic. Einstein was one of the first to appreciate the development of Cubism, and addressed both the avant-garde of modern art and the political situation in Europe in his writing. He enlisted in the German army in 1914, and after sustaining a combat injury was reassigned to a civilian department in Brussels. He was involved in the short-lived Revolutionary Brussels Soldiers' Council and in the failed Spartacist Uprising in Berlin, and was twice arrested. He befriended Dadaist artists such as George Grosz and John Heartfield. As a target of the political right wing, he moved to Paris in 1928. There he co-founded the journal Documents with Georges Bataille and Michel Leiris. In 1936, he joined the International Group of the Durutti Column, an anarchist military unit fighting against fascism in the Spanish Civil War. Following the defeat of the Spanish Republic in 1939, Einstein returned to France and continued working on his Handbuch der Kunst, a cross-cultural survey of European modern art. When Nazi Germany invaded France in 1940 in World War II, Einstein was trapped on the French-Spanish border. Seeing no alternative to being captured by the Nazis, he killed himself by jumping from a bridge on July 5, 1940.

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Statistiques

Œuvres
41
Aussi par
2
Membres
162
Popularité
#130,374
Évaluation
3.9
ISBN
54
Langues
6
Favoris
2

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