The Wolfgang Born – Kondakov Institute Correspondence : Art History, Freedom, and the Rising Fear in the 1930s

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Authors

PALLADINO Adrien

Year of publication 2019
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Convivium : Exchanges and Interactions in the Arts of Medieval Europe, Byzantium, and the Mediterranean : Seminarium Kondakovianum Series Nova
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Web https://doi.org/10.1484/J.CONVI.4.2019043
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/J.CONVI.4.2019043
Keywords Interwar Europe; emigration; nationalism; Kondakov Institute; Wolfgang Born; freedom; shared culture; humanism
Description Between 1931 and 1934, German artist and art historian Wolfgang Born exchanged several letters with the Kondakov Institute in Prague. Written during the troubled years of rising nationalism in Europe, these letters tell both part of Born’s story and, indirectly, of the Russian émigré institute itself. Born’s life story, until his forced emigration, allows us to question the role of culture at large when the society is under invasive political threat.It shows a trajectory from a vast, intercon- nected, intellectual milieu towards a fragmented world of émigré scholars. Above all, this epistolary exchange highlights how similar questions on the origins of artistic forms arose in humanistic milieus across Europe. It also illustrates how the rising totalitarian regimes attempted to shoehorn those inquiries into propagandistic, rac- ist narratives.
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