COBRA (avant-garde movement)

COBRA (or CoBrA) was a European avant-garde movement active from 1948 to 1951. The name was coined in 1948 by Christian Dotremont from the initials of the members' home cities: Copenhagen (Co), Brussels (Br), Amsterdam (A).

History

During the time of occupation of World War II, the Netherlands had been disconnected from the art world beyond its borders. COBRA was formed shortly thereafter. This international movement of artists who worked experimentally evolved from the criticisms of Western society and a common desire to break away from existing art movements, including "detested" naturalism and "sterile" abstraction. Experimentation was the symbol of an unfettered freedom, which, according to Constant, was ultimately embodied by children and the expressions of children.[1] COBRA was formed by Karel Appel, Constant, Corneille, Christian Dotremont, Asger Jorn, and Joseph Noiret on 8 November 1948 in the Café Notre-Dame, Paris,[2] with the signing of a manifesto, "La cause était entendue" ("The Case Was Settled"),[3] drawn up by Dotremont.[4] Formed with a unifying doctrine of complete freedom of colour and form, as well as antipathy towards Surrealism, the artists also shared an interest in Marxism as well as modernism.

Their working method was based on spontaneity and experiment, and they drew their inspiration in particular from children’s drawings, from primitive art forms and from the work of Paul Klee and Joan Miró.[2]

Coming together as an amalgamation of the Dutch group Reflex, the Danish group Høst and the Belgian Revolutionary Surrealist Group, the group only lasted a few years but managed to achieve a number of objectives in that time: the periodical Cobra, a series of collaborations between various members called Peintures-Mot and two large-scale exhibitions. The first of these was held at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, November 1949, the other at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Liège in 1951.

In November 1949 the group officially changed its name to Internationale des Artistes Expérimentaux with membership having spread across Europe and the USA, although this name has never stuck. The movement was officially disbanded in 1951, but many of its members remained close, with Dotremont in particular continuing collaborations with many of the leading members of the group.[5] The primary focus of the group consisted of semi-abstract paintings with brilliant color, violent brushwork, and distorted human figures inspired by primitive and folk art and similar to American action painting. Cobra was a milestone in the development of Tachisme and European abstract expressionism.

Cobra was perhaps the last avant-garde movement of the twentieth century.[6] According to Nathalie Aubert the group only lasted officially for three years (1948 to 1951). After that period each artist in the group developed their own individual paths.[7]

Manifesto

The manifesto, entitled, "La cause était entendue" (The Case Was Settled) was written by CoBrA member Christian Dotremont and signed by all founding members in Paris in 1948. It was directly speaking to their experience attending the Centre International de Documentation sur l’Art d’Avant-garde in which they felt the atmosphere was sterile and authoritarian. It was a statement of working collaboratively in an organic mode of experimentation in order to develop their work separate from the current place of the avant-garde movement. The name of the manifesto was also a play on words from an earlier document signed by Belgian and French Revolutionary Surrealists in July 1947, entitled "La cause est entendue" (The Case Is Settled).[8]

Method

The European artists were different from their American counterparts (the Abstract expressionists) for they preferred the process over the product and introduced primitive, mythical, and folkloric elements along with a decorative input from their children.[9] One of the new approaches that united the COBRA artists was their unrestrained use of strong colors, along with violent handwritings and figuration which can be either frightening or humorous. Their art was alive with subhuman figures in order to mirror the terror and weakness of our time unlike the dehumanized art of Abstraction.[10] This spontaneous method was a rejection of Renaissance art, specialization, and ‘civilized art’, they preferred ‘uncivilized’ forms of expression which created an interplay between the conscious and the unconscious instead of the Surrealist interest in the unconscious alone. The childlike in their method meant a pleasure in painting, in the materials, forms, and finally the picture itself; this aesthetic notion was called ‘desire unbound’. The Dutch Artists in particular within Cobra (Corneille, Appel, Constant) were interested in Children’s art.“We Wanted to start again like a child” Karen Appel insisted.[11] As part of the Western Left, they were built upon the fusion of Art and Life through experiment in order to unite form and expression.[7]

CoBrA exhibitions

They exhibited mainly in Holland, but also Paris and other countries in Europe.[12]

Stedelijk Museum Exhibition

The first major exhibition was held at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam in November 1949 under the title "International Experimental Art".

The museum's director and curator Willem Sandberg was interested in bringing experimentalism and abstraction to The Netherlands, and had also been an active member of the Dutch Resistance during the war. He was deeply involved with the CoBrA group and maintained direct contacts between the artists and the Stedelijk Museum.[13][14]

The architect Aldo van Eyck, who would later become known for his architecture of playgrounds as cultural critique, was asked to do the interior design of the exhibition. The close relationship between Van Eyck and the artists from the CoBrA, who also drew their inspiration in particular from children's drawings, makes it probable that much of Eyck's early inspiration for the playgrounds may have derived from CoBrA.[15][16]

The Stedelijk Museum exhibition gave rise to furious criticism from press and the public. A critic from Het Vrije Volk (Free People) wrote, “Geklad, geklets en geklodder in het Stedelijk Museum” (“Smirch, twaddle and mess in the SMA"). The CoBrA artists are considered scribblers and con artists.[15] Newspapers spoke of offensive art and provocation on the part of the artists, and one evening for experimental poetry at the Stedelijk was the occasion for a public brawl.[13]

Exhibition in Liège

The last CoBrA exhibit was located in Liège, Belgium, in 1951. Shortly after this exhibit, the group dissolved. The show was organised by Pierre Alechinsky, an artist from Belgium. The Dutch architect, Van Eyck designed the exhibition layout, just as he had for the 1949 CoBrA exhibition in Stedelijk. The innovations of this exhibit were that the composition for the wall was in a grid formation. In addition, the sculptures, which were featured in this show were on coal beds from the Liege area itself.

Interestingly enough, this show was not specific to only CoBrA artists, and also, major artists of the CoBrA movement were not in this exhibit due to the existing conflict within the group that eventually led to the collapse of CoBrA shortly after in the same year.[17]

Group Shows

Participants

Notable artists who had contact with, and/or were influenced by COBRA:

Criticism

Legacy

There is a Cobra Museum in Amstelveen, Netherlands, displaying works by Karel Appel and other international avant-garde art.

Auctioneers Bruun Rasmussen held an auction of COBRA artists on April 3, 2006 in Copenhagen. It set records for the highest price for an Asger Jorn painting (6.4 million DKK for Tristesse Blanche) and for the highest amount raised in a single auction in Denmark (30 million DKK in total).

See also

Notes

  1. Baumgartner, Michael. Klee and Cobra: A Child's Play. Hatje Cantz. pp. 59–60.
  2. 1 2 MOMA online collections page
  3. "La cause était entendue" is an ironical reference to the manifesto "La cause est entendue" (The Case Is Settled) from the supporters of Revolutionary Surrealism
  4. La cause etait entendue, first version of the CoBrA group's manifesto, 8 November 1948, Yale University Library, Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library
  5. "CoBrA Museum". Cobra Museum, The Netherlands..
  6. W. Stokvis - Cobra: The Last Avant-garde Movement of the Twentieth Century Lund Humphries 2004, 349 pages, ISBN 0853318980 [Retrieved 2015-07-15]
  7. 1 2 Auber, Nathalie. “’Cobra after Cobra’ And The Alba Congress: From Revolutionary Avant-Garde To Situationist Experiment.” Third Text 20.2 (2006): 259-267. Art Source. Web. 14 Sept. 2015.
  8. Stokvis, Willemijn (2004). Cobra: The Last Avant-Garde Movement. Aldershot: Lund Humphries.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Cooke, Lynne. “Review.” The Burlington Magazine 126, no. 978 (September 1, 1984): 583.
  10. Hoffmann, Edith. "Cobra Exhibition in Rotterdam." The Burlington Magazine 108.760 (1966): 388-89. JSTOR. Web. 14 Sept. 2015.
  11. Karen Appel, from an interview with Eleanor Flomenhaft, October 16, 1975; cited in Flomenhaft 1985, p. 33.
  12. Hoffmann, Edith (July 1966). "Cobra Exhibition in Rotterdam". The Burlington Magazine. JSTOR 875035.
  13. 1 2 http://www.stedelijk.nl/en/exhibitions/cobra-the-stedelijk
  14. http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/willem-sandberg-warm-printing
  15. 1 2 http://stichtingconstant.nl/cobra-1948-1951
  16. http://merijnoudenampsen.org/2013/03/27/aldo-van-eyck-and-the-city-as-playground/
  17. Kurczynski, Karen (August 2014). "The Art and Politics of Asger Jorn: The Avant-Garde Won't Give Up". Google Books. Ashgate Publishing Unlimited.
  18. 1 2 "Revisiting The Radically Avant-Garde Movement Art History Forgot". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2015-09-22
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