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- View_(magazine) abstract "View was an American literary and art magazine published from 1940 to 1947 by artist and writer Charles Henri Ford, and writer and film critic Parker Tyler. The magazine is best known for introducing Surrealism to the American public.The magazine covered the contemporary avant-garde and Surrealist scene, and was published quarterly as finances permitted until 1947. View featured cover designs by renown artists with the highly stylised typography of Tyler along with their art, and the prose and poetry of the day.Many of the contributors had been living in Europe, but took refuge in the U.S. during World War II bringing with them the avant-garde ideas of the time and precipitating a shift of the center of the art world from Paris to New York. It attracted contributions from writers like Wallace Stevens, an interview with whom was featured in the first number of View, William Carlos Williams, Joseph Cornell, Edouard Roditi, Henry Miller, Lawrence Durrell, Paul Bowles, Brion Gysin, Philip Lamantia, Paul Goodman, Marshall McLuhan, André Breton, Raymond Roussel, Albert Camus, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jean Genet or Jorge Luis Borges and artists like Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Fernand Léger, Georgia O'Keeffe, Man Ray, Joan Miró, Alexander Calder, Isamu Noguchi, Marc Chagall, René Magritte and Jean Dubuffet (Surrealism in Belgium, Dec. 1946). Max Ernst (April 1942), the Yves TanguyPavel Tchelitchew number with Nicolas Calas, Benjamin Péret, Kurt Seligmann, James Johnson Sweeney, Harold Rosenberg and Charles Henri Ford on Tanguy, Parker Tyler, Lincoln Kirstein and others on Tchelitchew (May 1942) and Marcel Duchamp, with an essay by André Breton, (march 1945) all got special numbers of the magazine. The earlier Surrealism special (View 7-8, 1941) had featured Artaud, Victor Brauner, Leonora Carrington, Marcel Duchamp and André Masson. There was an Americana Fantastica number (January 1943) and, edited by Paul Bowles the Tropical Americana issue on Mexico (In the 1940s, View Editions, the associated publishing house, came out with the first monograph on Marcel Duchamp and the first book translations of André Breton's poems.".
- View_(magazine) wikiPageExternalLink hofmann4.php.
- View_(magazine) wikiPageExternalLink view.html.
- View_(magazine) wikiPageID "9423430".
- View_(magazine) wikiPageRevisionID "586671958".
- View_(magazine) hasPhotoCollection View_(magazine).
- View_(magazine) subject Category:American_arts_magazines.
- View_(magazine) subject Category:American_literary_magazines.
- View_(magazine) subject Category:Surrealist_magazines.
- View_(magazine) type AmericanArtsMagazines.
- View_(magazine) type AmericanLiteraryMagazines.
- View_(magazine) type Artifact100021939.
- View_(magazine) type Creation103129123.
- View_(magazine) type Instrumentality103575240.
- View_(magazine) type Magazine106595351.
- View_(magazine) type Medium106254669.
- View_(magazine) type Object100002684.
- View_(magazine) type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- View_(magazine) type Press106263369.
- View_(magazine) type PrintMedia106263609.
- View_(magazine) type Product104007894.
- View_(magazine) type Publication106589574.
- View_(magazine) type SurrealistMagazines.
- View_(magazine) type Whole100003553.
- View_(magazine) type Work104599396.
- View_(magazine) comment "View was an American literary and art magazine published from 1940 to 1947 by artist and writer Charles Henri Ford, and writer and film critic Parker Tyler. The magazine is best known for introducing Surrealism to the American public.The magazine covered the contemporary avant-garde and Surrealist scene, and was published quarterly as finances permitted until 1947.".
- View_(magazine) label "View (magazine)".
- View_(magazine) sameAs m.02888c1.
- View_(magazine) sameAs Q7928745.
- View_(magazine) sameAs Q7928745.
- View_(magazine) sameAs View_(magazine).
- View_(magazine) wasDerivedFrom View_(magazine)?oldid=586671958.
- View_(magazine) isPrimaryTopicOf View_(magazine).