d"avant en arrière - определение. Что такое d"avant en arrière
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Что (кто) такое d"avant en arrière - определение

WORKS THAT ARE EXPERIMENTAL OR INNOVATIVE
Avant garde; Avant Garde; Avantgarde art; Avant gard; Avant-garde art; Avantgarde; Avante-garde; Avante garde; Avante Garde; Avant-gardism; Avant-Garde; Avant-guard; Adventgarde; Avant-gardes; Avant-gardist; Arrière-garde; Avantgarde artists; Avante-garde movement; Cultural avant-garde
  • Intellectuals of the avant-garde: Max Horkheimer (left) and Theodor Adorno (right) at Heidelberg in 1965.
  • Fountain]]'' (1917) by [[Marcel Duchamp]].<br> ([[Alfred Stieglitz]])
  • title=''The Love of Zero'' }}</ref>

Arriere-ban         
Arriere ban; Arriere-ban; Arrière ban
·noun A proclamation, as of the French kings, calling not only their immediate feudatories, but the vassals of these feudatories, to take the field for war; also, the body of vassals called or liable to be called to arms, as in ancient France.
Arrière-ban         
Arriere ban; Arriere-ban; Arrière ban
In medieval and early modern France, the arrière-ban (Latin retrobannum) was a general proclamation whereby the king (or duke) summoned to war all the vassals of his vassals.. The term is a folk-etymological correction of Old French herban (attested 1101), from Germanic here (army) and ban (proclamation); compare German Heerbann.
Avant-pop         
  • Front cover of ''Avant-Pop: Fiction for a Daydream Nation''
POPULAR MUSIC THAT IS EXPERIMENTAL, NEW AND DISTINCT FROM PREVIOUS STYLES WHILE RETAINING AN IMMEDIATE ACCESSIBILITY FOR THE LISTENER
Avant-pop (artistic movement); Avant pop; Avant-garde pop; Avantpop; Avant-pop music; Avantpop (artistic movement)
Avant-pop is popular music that is experimental, new, and distinct from previous styles while retaining an immediate accessibility for the listener. The term implies a combination of avant-garde sensibilities with existing elements from popular music in the service of novel or idiosyncratic artistic visions.

Википедия

Avant-garde

In the arts and in literature, the term avant-garde (advance guard and vanguard) identifies a genre of art, an experimental work of art, and the experimental artist who created the work of art, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable to the artistic establishment of the time. The military metaphor of an advance guard identifies the artists and writers whose innovations in style, form, and subject-matter challenge the artistic and aesthetic validity of the established forms of art and the literary traditions of their time; thus how the artists who created the anti-novel and Surrealism were ahead of their times.

As a stratum of the intelligentsia of a society, avant-garde artists promote progressive and radical politics and advocate for societal reform with and through works of art. In the essay "The Artist, the Scientist, and the Industrialist" (1825) Benjamin Olinde Rodrigues's political usage of vanguard identified the moral obligation of artists to "serve as [the] avant-garde" of the people, because "the power of the arts is, indeed, the most immediate and fastest way" to realise social, political, and economic reforms.

In the realm of culture, the artistic experiments of the avant-garde push the aesthetic boundaries of societal norms, such as the disruptions of modernism in poetry, fiction, and drama, painting, music, and architecture, the occurred in the late 19th and in the early 20th centuries. In art history the socio-cultural functions of avant-garde art trace from Dada (1915–1920s) through the Situationist International (1957–1972) to the Postmodernism of the American Language poets (1960s–1970s).