Fantasies of Precision
American Modern Art, 1908-1947
Redefining the artistic movement that helped shape American modernism
Details
Fantasies of Precision
American Modern Art, 1908-1947
ISBN: 9781517913144
Publication date: July 11th, 2023
360 Pages
127 black and white illustrations and 19 color plates
10 x 7
"Fantasies of Precision is a book that lives up to the genius of its artworks. With unusual sophistication and ease, Ashley Lazevnick brings the historical facts of American philosophy, medicine, technology, and literature to the flat, painted surfaces of modernist precisionism. Charles Demuth, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Charles Sheeler have found their new champion."—Jennifer Jane Marshall, author of Machine Art, 1934
"Ashley Lazevnick confronts the inherent imprecision of our understanding of the precisionist movement, freshly arguing for the term’s usefulness. Her expansive study builds on fluid and layered observations, close looking, and surprising connections across cultural corridors. She makes the familiar unfamiliar, making us look again."—Wanda M. Corn, Stanford University
Redefining the artistic movement that helped shape American modernism
In the early decades of the twentieth century, a loose contingent of artists working in and around New York City gave rise to the aesthetic movement known as precisionism, primarily remembered for its exacting depictions of skyscrapers, factories, machine parts, and other symbols of a burgeoning modernity. Although often regarded as a singular group, these artists were remarkably varied in their subject matter and stylistic traits. Fantasies of Precision excavates the surprising ties that connected them, exploring notions of precision across philosophy, technology, medicine, and many other fields.
Bookended by discussions of the landmark First Biennial Exhibition of Painting at the Whitney Museum in 1932, this study weaves together a series of interconnected chapters illuminating the careers of Charles Sheeler, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Charles Demuth. Built on a theoretical framework of the writing of modernist poets Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams, Fantasies of Precision outlines an “ethos of precision” that runs through the diverse practices of these artists, articulating how the broad range of enigmatic imagery they produced was underpinned by shared strategies of restraint, humility, and slowness.
Questioning straightforward modes of art historical classification, Ashley Lazevnick redefines the concept that designated the precisionist movement. Through its cross-disciplinary approach and unique blend of historiography and fantasy, Fantasies of Precision offers a comprehensive reevaluation of one of the defining movements of artistic modernism.
Ashley Lazevnick is assistant professor of art history at Converse University.