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Manifeste de l’art cérébriste
[Cerebrist art]
Le Figaro, February 9, 1914, p. 1; Montjoie!, January-February, 1914.
Author(s): Ricciotto Canudo
Associated movement: Cerebrism
Language : French
Medium : Periodical Press
Original edition of the manifesto: Le Figaro, February 9, 1914, p. 1; Montjoie!, January-February, 1914.
Where can we find this manifesto? Mitchell, Bonner, Les Manifestes littéraires de la Belle Époque. 1886-1914. Anthologie critique. Paris, Seghers, 1966, pp. 173-176. Danchev, Alex, 100 Artists' Manifestos. From the Futurists to the Stuckists, Penguin, Londres, 2011.
Which critic recognizes the work as a manifesto ? or: Typical characteristics of a manifesto Mitchell, Bonner, Les Manifestes littéraires de la Belle Époque. 1886-1914. Anthologie critique. Paris, Seghers, 1966. Danchev, Alex, 100 Artists' Manifestos. From the Futurists to the Stuckists, Penguin, Londres, 2011.
Editorial comments: Even if the text is not titled manifesto, it is introduced as such by the Figaro, as it was frequently the case between the end of the XIXth and the beginning of the XXth centuries: "Voici un manifeste où quelques jeunes artistes, soucieux d'exprimer une pensée nouvelle et une inquiétude pas encore ressentie, ont formulé leurs espoirs et leurs ambitions".
Does the work corresponds to the definition of a manifesto? Yes
Does the work qualifies itself as a manifesto?
Is the signature individual, collective, or individual but in the name of a collective? Individual
Gender of the author(s): Male