Actualité
Appels à contributions
Futurisms: precursors, protagonists, legacies

Futurisms: precursors, protagonists, legacies

Publié le par Florian Pennanech (Source : Monica Jansen)

Utrecht University now accepts proposals for papers at an international conference on “Futurisms: precursors, protagonists, legacies”, to be held in Utrecht from 1 till 3 December 2009. Confirmed keynote speakers are Günter Berghaus (Bristol University), Giovanni Lista (CNRS, Paris), Marjorie Perloff (Stanford University) and Jeffrey Schnapp (Stanford University); confirmed invited speakers are Walter Adamson (Amory University, Atlanta), Timothy Campbell (Cornell University), Silvia Contarini (Paris-X Nanterre) and Luca Somigli (Toronto University).

Programme

A century after the launching of the first Futurist manifesto in 1909, and 65 years since Marinetti's death on December 2, 1944, Futurism seems to be the one avant-garde movement that was most successful in enduringly inspiring artists and writers around the world and in thus bridging the gap between theory and praxis. This conference aims at a better/deeper understanding of Futurism's significance by focusing on the (relative) innovative qualities of the movement (Precursors), lesser-known actual Futurist projects and careers (Protagonists) and its lasting cultural and political relevance (Legacies).

Like most avant-garde movements Futurism suggested to present a clear break with the art and ideas of the past. Yet many of its defining characteristics can be traced to earlier movements, artists and currents. Futurism's defining forwards looking rhetoric tended to obscure these relationships as well as its own regressive character. The Precursors-segment of the conference will try to address these issues.

The canon of Futurist works and artists is fairly limited. The scope of the movement has been demonstrated in major exhibitions (catalogues), but many major works, concepts and careers remain relatively unknown. In the Protagonist-section the conference acknowledges the diversity of the Futurist project by showing, analyzing and discussing contributions that even most specialists, scholars and curators tend to leave out of the picture.

The Legacies-part deals with the heritage of Marinetti's programme, which is overwhelmingly present, in the arts as well as in society at large. New internet applications have abolished boundaries of time and space. WiFi offers the opportunities already advocated in Marinetti's concept of ‘wireless imagination'. Emerging young poets all over the globe engage in destroying syntax and introducing mathematical sign language, thus accomplishing on a worldwide scale Marinetti's Futurist poetics of telegraphic language. After the success of concrete poetry and musique concrète in the 1950s, multimedia, mixed media and inter-mediality presently reign in the arts world. And also ideologically the Futurist legacy has not lost its topicality, nor its highly controversial impact, considering the re-emergence of Futurist ideas on the hygiene of war in the rhetoric on the war on terror.

Futurism's presence in today's world calls for reflection, both on the topicality of the futurist legacy during the past century and on its transformations. In mapping Futurism's development and presence in technological, artistic and political terms, the conference hopes to gain better understanding of the movement's legacy as well as of the cultural dynamics of transgression vs regression which in the long run determines Futurism's lasting success. 

The conference will host a (neo)futurist event on the evening of December 2, to mark Marinetti's death exactly 65 years earlier. It will also include a reflection on the many initiatives, from the major exhibitions in Paris, London and Rome through the series of conferences, organized in the year 2009 to mark the centenary of Marinetti's Futurist Manifesto.

Call for Papers

Proposals are invited for 20 minute-papers. Proposals should include a brief description of the paper (maximum 250 words), name, mail and postal address, academic affiliation. Please submit only by mail at: futurisms@uu.nl.

Deadline for submission: June 15, 2009. Notification on acceptance will be given by July 1, 2009. A selection of the conference papers is eligible for inclusion in an edited volume on the conference topic, to be published with a major international academic publisher. Deadline for submission of the selected and reworked papers is June 1, 2010.

Paper topics may include, but should not be limited to, the following fields: 

Precursors:

  • Symbolism/Futurism (antagonism, continuity)
  • D'Annunzio-Marinetti: the concept of war; Fiume
  • The dynamics of transgression vs regression and of elitism vs populism
  • Futurism considered within the dynamics between avant-garde and arrière-garde movements
  • Time-related concepts (past, future, modern, classical, memory, heritage) and their expression in specific and distinct styles 

Protagonists:

  • Careers and enjeu of Paolo Buzzi (poetry and collage), Francesco & Pasqualino Cangiullo (parole in libertà), Fortunato Depero (toys, design), Enrico Prampolini, Valentine de Saint-Point
  • Lesser known projects of Marinetti, Carrà, Balla, Severini and Russolo
  • The transgression of national boundaries: the positioning of futurism as an Italian or international movement (including international performances, itinerant exhibitions, and the diaspora of futurists)
  • War & Futurism 1909-1915-1945

Legacies:

  • Past and present telecommunication technologies as Futurist writing systems (telegraphy, radiophony, cinematography, videography, SMS, HTML)
  • The intermediality in the arts, cross-over forms of expression (verbal-visual-aural-performative) undermining current concepts of mediality
  • The Art of Noise – sampling, soundscapes, ambient
  • War aesthetics, war spectacles
  • The topicality of the Futurist “art-action” programme, the positioning of art versus/within society and politics (including the relationship between Futurism and Fascism)

Organisors

  • Geert Buelens (chair of modern Dutch literature, University of Utrecht)
  • Harald Hendrix (chair of Italian Studies, University of Utrecht)
  • Monica Jansen (assistant professor in Italian Studies, Universities of Utrecht and Antwerp)
  • Wanda Strauven (associate professor in Film Studies, University of Amsterdam)

Information

Conference website: www.hum.uu.nl/futurisms

Mail: futurisms@uu.nl