
A Class Struggle in Umberto’s Boccioni’s Painting- Street Noises Invade the House (1911)
Author(s) -
Tek Bahadur Chhetry
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
nepal journal of multidisciplinary research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2705-4691
pISSN - 2645-8470
DOI - 10.3126/njmr.v5i1.44611
Subject(s) - painting , art , harmony (color) , marxist philosophy , contemporary art , aesthetics , art history , visual arts , politics , performance art , law , political science
The modern art of the early twentieth century is the reaction to Realism, and impressionists were the first who broke away from so called rule bound represented bourgeoisie. That is to say that they are the harbingers of the twentieth century art. As Europe was shifting swiftly with the new things being built, the impressionists were changing the whole concept in the art with an attempt to avoid myths and history in painting and developed a new perspective to look at the painting and do it as it is for anyone. This avant-garde art has brought about symbolism, cubism, fauvism and futurism. It has also put the dimension of art and painting in a new mode of representation. Futurism embraces the chaos of the advances in technology with the features like dynamism, speed, energy, vitality and change as an inspiring way to reject the tradition and face the future. Against this backdrop, this paper examines how futurism, an artistic mode of representation has situated the context of art into a social change in Umberto Boccioni’s painting- Street Noises Invade the House (1911) vis-a-vis the Marxist approach of class struggle. In addition, the paper also analyzes the formal elements- color, structure, balance and harmony employed in the art by the artist that constitute the composite whole.