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| Wyndham Lewis: |
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| Blast 1 |
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Introduction by Bradford Morrow
Facsimile edition edited by Wyndham Lewis |
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... the Vortex of Lewis:
sun, energy, sombre emotion,
clean-drawing, disgust, penetrating analysis ...'' Ezra Pound |
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| In December 1913, Ezra Pound wrote to William Carlos Williams calling the London art/literary scene ''The Vortex.'' Wyndham Lewis in turn appropriated the term to christen his budding movement in the arts, ''Vorticism.'' Vorticism was baptized on June 20, 1914 in the first issue of BLAST, A Review of the Great English Vortex - Lewis's revolutionary magazine. BLAST is now considered one of this century's examples of modernist expression and typography, both historically indispensable and a milestone in modern thought. To the artistic audience of its time, the first issue of BLAST came as a brutal shock (Lewis's plan was to create a ''battering ram''), a quality that has been preserved in this first facsimile edition. Described by Lewis as ''violent pink,'' but by some others as the ''puce monster,'' the large format magazine displaying radical typography and design, featuring a ''Vorticist Manifesto'' and eye-popping lists of items to be ''Blessed'' and ''Blasted.'' This new edition of BLAST documents in its original format the raw e nergy, violent humor, and graphic inventiveness. |
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| 168 pages, Paperback, 9'' x 12'', 33 b/w illustrations, English, ISBN: 978-1-58423-342-8 |
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| $ 24.95 |
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| About the Editor: |
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Bradford Morrow, formerly a Danforth Fellow in English Literature at Yale University, has lived and worked in Italy, France, England and the United States. He graduated summa cum laude from the University of Colorado in English and comparative literature and has published a number of critical articles about Ezra Pound, Italian lyric poetry, Vorticism and other topics. Mr. Morrow is a specialist and dealer in rare books and manuscripts.
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