Envisaging alternatives: representations of women in Kurt Schwitters’ collages
dc.contributor.advisor
Weikop, Christian
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Anderson, Fiona
en
dc.contributor.author
Collins, Cole
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-11-15T14:24:31Z
dc.date.available
2018-11-15T14:24:31Z
dc.date.issued
2018-11-27
dc.description.abstract
In the existing literature on Kurt Schwitters, many excellent discoveries about process,
materiality, and his life have been made. The careful reconstruction of these narratives by
scholars such as Werner Schmalenbach, John Elderfield, Isabel Schulz, Gwendolen
Webster, Marc Dachy, Roger Cardinal, Karin Orchard and Megan Luke, have given
invaluable insights into the ways in which Schwitters’ work has influenced and been
integral to the development of the various avant-garde movements of the twentieth century.
However, while these studies have laid the foundations to examine the biographical and
aesthetic qualities of Schwitters’ work, it has often denied readings that allow for an
understanding of the political aspects which confront the viewer.
Schwitters was the creator of Merz, a hybrid art form which borrowed from Expressionism,
Dada, and Constructivism, but was never singularly committed to any of these
movements/groups. Schwitters had had too much training to be a serious Expressionist,
the movement denied academic and formal training, too bourgeois and not political enough
for Dadaism, and not abstract or ‘clean’ enough to be considered a Constructivist. Merz
was his and only his to be practiced and led him to be included in exhibitions of Dadaist,
Constructivist and Surrealist artworks. His hybrid aesthetic, coupled with his own illusive
remarks about his own practice, have produced readings of Schwitters’ work as only
concerned with aesthetics; in some cases entirely ignoring the implications and
connotations of the compositions themselves and the meanings behind the fragments used
in his works. The idea often floated is that once the fragment has been detached from its
original form, it no longer holds its original meaning. However, my thesis seeks to argue
that this is entirely untrue and that contemporary audiences would have been unable to
ignore these connections. As such, the collage takes on new meanings and we, the
audience, must examine these connotations.
My thesis argues for a political reading of the works which feature women. Images of
women, taken from fashion magazines and clothing catalogs, are cut up and re-arranged in
Schwitters’ abstract and hectic compositions. He then pairs these images with fragments of
text, images of animals, or in odd compositions which causes a significant shift in
perspective for the viewer. In most cases, these pairings are paradoxical or presented so that the two components juxtapose one another. My thesis argues that these works might
be discussed in the context of the social and political goings on in the world in which
Schwitters creates his artworks. This approach to his work has heretofore remained
unexplored and as I show in my research by examining these images, new and revealing
details about the artist’s work are uncovered.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33231
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Kurt Schwitter
en
dc.title
Envisaging alternatives: representations of women in Kurt Schwitters’ collages
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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