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FILIPPO TOMMASO MARINETTI. In the Evening, Lying on Her Bed, She Reread the Letter from Her Artilleryman at the Front (Le Soir, couchée dans son lit, elle relisait la lettre de son artilleur au front), published in Les Mots en liberté futuristes

In the Evening, Lying on Her Bed, She Reread the Letter from Her Artilleryman at the Front (Le Soir, couchée dans son lit, elle relisait la lettre de son artilleur au front), published in Les Mots en liberté futuristes. Artist: Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (Italian, born Egypt, Alexandria 1876-1944 Bellagio, Italy). Dimensions: 13 3/4 x 9 1/8 in.  (34.9 x 23.2 cm). Date: Created 1917, published 1919.
In 1909 Marinetti published "The Manifesto of Futurism," in which he called for a revolutionary art that would reflect the sounds, images, and dynamism of modern life. He soon developed parole in libertà (words-in-freedom), a radical form of writing based on the destruction and reconfiguration of words and sounds. These collage-poems contained dispersed text, fragmented words, onomatopoeias, and distorted letters. This particular work is an example of Marinetti's tavole parolibere (free-word pictures), in which he mixed innovative typography with imagery to create a kind of visual and aural cacophony. As the woman depicted in silhouette reads a note from "her artilleryman," fragments of words both real and constructed, and distorted in size, shape, and form, thunder above her, reflecting the sounds of the war as well as the Futurists' fight against convention.
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Title:
In the Evening, Lying on Her Bed, She Reread the Letter from Her Artilleryman at the Front (Le Soir, couchée dans son lit, elle relisait la lettre de son artilleur au front), published in Les Mots en liberté futuristes
Caption:
In the Evening, Lying on Her Bed, She Reread the Letter from Her Artilleryman at the Front (Le Soir, couchée dans son lit, elle relisait la lettre de son artilleur au front), published in Les Mots en liberté futuristes. Artist: Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (Italian, born Egypt, Alexandria 1876-1944 Bellagio, Italy). Dimensions: 13 3/4 x 9 1/8 in. (34.9 x 23.2 cm). Date: Created 1917, published 1919. In 1909 Marinetti published "The Manifesto of Futurism," in which he called for a revolutionary art that would reflect the sounds, images, and dynamism of modern life. He soon developed parole in libertà (words-in-freedom), a radical form of writing based on the destruction and reconfiguration of words and sounds. These collage-poems contained dispersed text, fragmented words, onomatopoeias, and distorted letters. This particular work is an example of Marinetti's tavole parolibere (free-word pictures), in which he mixed innovative typography with imagery to create a kind of visual and aural cacophony. As the woman depicted in silhouette reads a note from "her artilleryman," fragments of words both real and constructed, and distorted in size, shape, and form, thunder above her, reflecting the sounds of the war as well as the Futurists' fight against convention.
Technique/material:
letterpress
Museum:
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Credit:
Album / Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
Releases:
Model: No - Property: No
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Image size:
2959 x 4265 px | 36.1 MB
Print size:
25.1 x 36.1 cm | 9.9 x 14.2 in (300 dpi)