Es ist höchste Zeit, einen frischen Blick auf das Jahrhundertgenie zu werfen. In den letzten Jahren sind sehr wichtige Forschungsergebnisse zu den unterschiedlichsten Einzelaspekten in Leben und Werk des spanischen Künstlers vorgelegt worden, sodass eine flüssig zu lesende Überblicksschau heute mehr denn je nottut. Genau das leistet hier Mary Ann Caws, die Grande Dame der amerikanischen Surrealismusforschung. Sie ist für diese Aufgabe prädestiniert. Denn sie gilt nicht nur als eine der weltweit besten Spezialistinnen auf dem Feld französischer Kultur und Literatur, sondern besitzt auch schriftstellerisches Talent: Sie hat – neben ihrer Hochschultätigkeit – Romane und Gedichte veröffentlicht, die in den USA auf viel Resonanz gestoßen sind. In ihrem Picasso-Buch konzentriert sich die Autorin auf das Netz der Beziehungen um den Maler, auf die Geliebten und Musen, auf die Familienangehörigen und Kinder, die Schriftstellerfreunde und Kunsthändler. So entsteht ein zeitgenössisches, sehr lebendig gezeichnetes Bild von Picasso, welches die Gewichte anders lagert, als dies bisher geschehen ist.
Mary Ann Caws Bücher
Mary Ann Caws ist eine amerikanische Autorin, Kunsthistorikerin und Literaturkritikerin, deren Werk sich mit den komplexen Beziehungen zwischen bildender Kunst und literarischen Texten befasst. Sie ist eine anerkannte Expertin für Surrealismus sowie für moderne englische und französische Literatur und untersucht die Verbindungen zwischen verschiedenen Kunstformen. Caws analysiert akribisch das Leben und die Werke bedeutender Künstler und Schriftsteller und deckt tiefgreifende Zusammenhänge in deren Schaffen auf. Ihre literarischen Analysen werden für ihre Tiefe und ihren einzigartigen Blick auf die Kunstwelt geschätzt.






Dora Maar
- 224 Seiten
- 8 Lesestunden
Dora Maar. Die Künstlerin an Picassos Seite
- 224 Seiten
- 8 Lesestunden
Beginnings of the Prose Poem: All Over the Place
- 155 Seiten
- 6 Lesestunden
Exploring the origins of the prose poem, this anthology features foundational works by iconic figures like William Blake and Charles Baudelaire, alongside lesser-known writers such as Judith Gautier and Elena Guro. It highlights the genre's unique embrace of hybridity across aesthetic, cultural, and political dimensions. The collection, edited by Mary Ann Caws and Michel Delville, is essential for those interested in modern poetics and literary innovation, showcasing contributions from over 20 translators worldwide.
Alice Paalen Rahon was a shapeshifter, a surrealist poet turned painter who was born French and died a naturalized citizen of Mexico. Her first husband was the artist Wolfgang Paalen, among her lovers were Pablo Picasso and the poet Valentine Penrose, and over the years her circle of friends included Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, Joan Miró, Paul Éluard, Man Ray, and Anaïs Nin. This bilingual edition of Rahon’s poems confirms the achievement of this little-known but visionary writer who defies categorization. Her spellbinding poems, inspired by prehistoric art, lost love, and travels around the globe, weave together dream, fantasy, and madness. For the first time in any language, this book gathers the three collections of poetry Rahon published in her lifetime, along with uncollected and unpublished poems and an album of portraits, manuscript pages, and artworks.
A biography of the flamboyant and unapologetically avant-garde Mina Loy.
"Having the freedom of our perceptual conviction," writes Mary Ann Caws, "would mean the ability at once to challenge institutional presentations and individual visions and to invent our own fictions of seeing." In The Art of Interference Caws argues for a "personally passionate criticism," emphasizing that reading texts of literature and visual art can never be a fixed and closed process. She addresses the issues of how to look for, read, and know what is important when considering literary and visual works and how to establish relations and enhance "seeing" by such techniques as framing, bridging, fragmenting, integrating, and multiplying. These chapters are filled with Caws's own readings, which demonstrate the richness of connection-making. Written in a free, unpedantic style, this book opens up works to the imagination, making many original and significant connections between texts and art works. The author covers various movements in modern literature, art, and architecture, such as modernism, Dadaism, surrealism, concretism, and spatialism. In so doing, she draws relationships between painting and poetry, analyzing, among others, the work of Tintoretto, Van Gogh, Cornell, Stevens, Bataille, Mallarm, Derrida, and Arakawa.
Women of Bloomsbury
- 234 Seiten
- 9 Lesestunden
Originally published in 1990, Women of Bloomsbury takes a fresh look at the lives of Virginia Woolf, her sister Vanessa Bell, and Dora Carrington. Connected by more than bonds of friendship and artistic endeavour, the three women faced similar struggles. Juxtaposing their personal lives and their work, Mary Ann Caws shows us with feeling and clarity the pain women suffer in being artists and in finding - or creating - their sense of self. Relying on unpublished letters and diaries, as well as familiar texts, Caws give us a portrait of the female self in the act of creation.
A collection of highlights from Mary Ann Caws's long, highly distinguished career writing about literature, art, and modernism. Throughout her long, highly distinguished career writing about literature and art, Mary Ann Caws has excavated, illuminated, and examined in depth the most intriguing works and personalities of Symbolism, Dada, Surrealism, and beyond. In these concise, but always colorful and insightful articles, Caws brings us fresh portraits of the most famous figures and introduces us to the writers and artists who merit more attention than they've received, with a special focus on female writers and artists. The author's sensitivity to the intersections of eccentric literature and eccentric life infuses each critical essay with the human passions that these essential modernists lived. From Dickinson and Mallarmé to Duchamp and Mina Loy, Caws applies the art of close looking to shrewdly framed slices of the modernist experience.

