Joseph cornell biography
•
Summary of Joseph Cornell
Using the Surrealist technique of unexpected juxtaposition, Joseph Cornell's best-known works are glass-fronted boxes into which he placed and arranged Victorian bric-a-brac, old photographs, dime-store trinkets, and other found elements. Generally referred to as "shadow boxes," the resulting pieces are dream-like miniature tableaux that inspire the viewer to see each component in a new light. Cornell often used the shadow boxes to address recurrent themes of interest such as childhood, space, and birds, and they represented an escape of sorts for their creator, who was famously reclusive. Among the earliest examples of assemblage, the shadow boxes also helped give rise to a host of other Modern and Contemporary American art forms, from Installation art to Fluxus boxes.
Accomplishments
- Cornell's signature art form is the shadow box. Infused with a dream-like aura, the shadow boxes invite the viewer into Cornell's own private, magical world. Alternatel
•
Artist Profile: namn Cornell
Joseph Cornell & His Own Brand of American Surrealism
Though now considered one of the few American proponents of Surrealism, Joseph Cornell was apprehensive about the affiliation, once admitting to Alfred H. Barr that, “I do not share in the subconscious and dream theories of the surrealists. While fervently admiring much of their work, I have never been an tjänsteman surrealist” and in a letter to the poet Charles Henri Ford, “I never liked the kind of black magic that Dali, Breton, etc. go in for—its always seemed cheap to me.” Instead of finding commonalities, Cornell readily identified Salvador Dalí, André Breton, and högsta Ernst with profanity, eroticism, extreme subversion, and iconoclasm. His apparent personal aversion notwithstanding, Cornell’s art should not be so readily branded “Surrealist”. Cornell’s vein of avant-gardewas forged from childlike innocence and as a secretive refuge from adulthood (stories bygd Hans Christian An
•
Joseph Cornell
American artist and filmmaker (–)
This article is about the artist and sculptor. For the nature educator, see Joseph Bharat Cornell.
Joseph Cornell (December 24, – December 29, ) was an American visual artist and filmmaker, one of the pioneers and most celebrated exponents of assemblage. Influenced by the Surrealists, he was also an avant-garde experimental filmmaker. He was largely self-taught in his artistic efforts, and improvised his own original style incorporating cast-off and discarded artifacts. He lived most of his life in relative physical isolation, caring for his mother and his disabled brother at home, but remained aware of and in contact with other contemporary artists.
Life
[edit]Joseph Cornell was born in Nyack, New York,[1][2] to Joseph Cornell, a textiles industry executive,[3] and Helen Ten Broeck Storms Cornell, who had trained as a nursery teacher.[4] Both parents came from socially prominent fam