Comment on England  

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"'''Comment on England''' (1935) is an essay by [[Geoffrey Grigson]] first published in the first issue of [[Axis (magazine)|Axis]][https://monoskop.org/images/d/d3/Axis_1_Jan_1935.pdf]. The essay features an early use of the term ''[[biomorphism]]''. "'''Comment on England''' (1935) is an essay by [[Geoffrey Grigson]] first published in the first issue of [[Axis (magazine)|Axis]][https://monoskop.org/images/d/d3/Axis_1_Jan_1935.pdf]. The essay features an early use of the term ''[[biomorphism]]''.
 +:"Abstractions are of two kinds, [[geometric]], the abstractions which lead to the inevitable death ; and [[biomorphic]]. The biomorphic abstractions are the beginning of the next central phase in the progress of art. They exist between Mondrian and Dali, between idea and emotion, between matter and mind, matter and life."
-:"with their enlarged knowledge of the widened country of self. Certain artists have realised this in their practice ; abroad Picasso, Brancusi, Klee, Miro , Hélion ; in England Wyndham Lewis and Henry Moore. Abstractions are of two kinds, geometric, the abstractions which lead to the inevitable death ; and ''[[biomorphic]]''.  
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-:"Product of the multiform inventive artist, abstraction-surrealism nearly in control; of a constructor of images between the conscious and the unconscious and between what we perceive and what we project emotionally into the objects of our world; of the one English sculptor of large, imaginative power, of which he is almost master; the [[biomorphist]] producing viable work, with all the technique he requires." 
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"Comment on England (1935) is an essay by Geoffrey Grigson first published in the first issue of Axis[1]. The essay features an early use of the term biomorphism.

"Abstractions are of two kinds, geometric, the abstractions which lead to the inevitable death ; and biomorphic. The biomorphic abstractions are the beginning of the next central phase in the progress of art. They exist between Mondrian and Dali, between idea and emotion, between matter and mind, matter and life."





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