Bohemianism and 'artistism'  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
A Paris street - set design for Act II of Puccini's La bohème by Adolfo Hohenstein.
Enlarge
A Paris street - set design for Act II of Puccini's La bohème by Adolfo Hohenstein.

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

One of the funniest episodes in the historiography of bohemianism is the first appearance of the term bohemian in relation to artistic endeavor. The year is 1834 and Félix Pyat, a French journalist of communard persuasion, publishes a well-written article called "Les Artistes" in which he derogatorily describes wannabe artists as "alien and bizarre ... outside the law, beyond the reaches of society ... they are the Bohemians of today" (tr. Levi Asher).

Félix Pyat connects 'one who lives like a Bohemian', meaning like a vagabond, with artists and he calls the latter "les Bohémiens d’aujourd’hui" (the Bohemians of today).

The funniest bit is when he condemns artistry itself, comparing it to a disease which he calls "artistism":

"That which should be the exception of privileged natures has become a general rule; what am I saying, a fashion, a rage, a furor, a contagious, epidemic, endemic malady, a scourge worse than cholera, a veritable plague from the Orient, artistism." (tr. Geerinck, Daniel Cottom, 2013)

The term Bohemianism, meant as a slur was later reappropriated by the artistic community.

The illustration above by Adolfo Hohenstein is extremely picturesque and immediately recognizable as a French or Parisian street.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Bohemianism and 'artistism'" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools