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Modernism on Trial: C. Brancusi v. United States (1928)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

Thomas L. Hartshorne
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of History at Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio 44115. He wishes to thank Paul P. Rao, Chief Judge of the United States Customs Court in New York, and the Clerk of the court, Howard Basler, for making available to him the records in the case of C. Brancusi v. United States. He also wishes to thank John F. Kovacic, District Director of Customs in Cleveland, who allowed him to do the necessary research into the case records in his office.

Extract

We all know that the revolution in art – or the revolutions in the arts – that resulted in the emergence of what we loosely call “modernism” created a great deal of excitement and controversy. Noise and shouting filled the air. Critics opposed to the new currents saw in them the possibility of the destruction of everything noble in the Western tradition of the arts and perhaps even Western civilization itself. Defenders of the new ways were only slightly less acrimonious, if at all, and between the two there were continuing tumultuous and occasionally bitter arguments.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1986

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References

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2 Quoted in Rose, Barbara, American Art since 1900: A Critical History (New York, 1967), p. 113Google Scholar.

3 This sculpture has since been acquired by The Museum of Modern Art, New York.

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5 New York Times (22 October 1927).

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9 The following account of the case is taken from the official typescript records. They Consist of the following material: a deposition by Brancusi, verbatim records of the two hearings in the case, briefs in argument by the government and the plaintiff, and an additional memorandum in behalf of the plaintiff. The decision is printed in the United States Treasury Decisions, 54, no. 43063 and reprinted in Fresh Paint: A Just Decision,” The Arts, 14 (12 1928), 337–38Google Scholar.

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