Graham Bader is associate professor and chair of art history at Rice University.
“An exceptional example of complex academic research, which has has
been elegantly articulated in a well-balanced and beautifully
produced volume.”—Beth Williamson, Burlington Magazine
“In Poisoned Abstraction, Graham Bader presents the conflict
between actual refuse and abstract composition not as an obstacle
to [Schwitters’s] work but as our way into it. . . . On the one
hand, the rubbish deployed by Schwitters affronted traditional
ideas of artmaking; on the other, its use pointed to a new
aesthetic responsive to the ruinous aftermath of the war. To lose
this tension—to reject the work as mere trash, as the reactionaries
did, or as autonomous art, as the radicals did—is to miss the
dialectical force that drives it.”—Hal Foster, London Review of
Books
“In this beautiful, lavishly illustrated book, Bader provides an
excellent analysis of Schwitters (1887–1948), one of modern art’s
most original and versatile figures. Bader sets Schwitters’s
creations in the landscape of his times, from his early Merz
collages dating around 1919 to his mature production in the 1940s .
. . [and] provides a coherent, well-argued analysis of the
theoretical forces that actuated the artist’s work, enabling him to
cope with exile and radical change. Summing up: Recommended.”—E. G.
Wickersham, Choice
“Poisoned Abstraction is the account of Schwitters for our moment.
Its comprehensiveness does justice to the complexity of his art and
critically expands our understanding of Schwitters
himself.”—Bibiana Obler, George Washington University
“A fascinating analysis of Kurt Schwitters’s body of work. Graham
Bader successfully makes sense of Schwitters’s often puzzling art,
its evolution, and its meaning in a context that shifted
dramatically between the two world wars.”—Andrés Mario Zervigón,
author of John Heartfield and the Agitated Image: Photography,
Persuasion, and the Rise of Avant-Garde Photomontage
“Graham Bader’s elegant study explores key aspects of Kurt
Schwitters’s practice, testing the artist’s relay between art and
life. In exploring how Schwitters’s works, made from the shards of
a devastated modern landscape, create meaning and value, Bader is a
thoughtful and probing guide.”—Leah Dickerman, Museum of Modern
Art
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