This book explores German and European exile visual artists, designers and film practitioners in the United States such as Max Beckmann, George Grosz, Hans Richter, Peter Lorre, and Edgar Ulmer and examines how American artists including Walter Quirt, Jackson Pollock, and Robert Motherwell responded to the Europeanization of American culture.PART I: EXILE AND THE REVALUATION OF HIGH ART Reflections on Max Beckmann's Experience of His American Exile; F.Forster-Hahn George Grosz in Dallas; B.McCloskey The American Reception of Surrealism; A.Miller German Exile, Modern Art and National Identity; S.Eckmann PART II: A GUIDE FOR EMIGRANTS 'You Know, This Isn't Bad Advice!!'; R.Stih & F.Schnock PART III: POPULAR MODERNISM AND THE LEGACY OF THE AVANT-GARDE IN EXILE Peters and Schneider: The Drawing Board as Home; I.Boyd Whyte Permanent Vacation: Home and Homelessness in the Films of Edgar G. Ulmer; N.Isenberg Mad Love: Re-Membering Berlin in Hollywood Exile; L.Koepnick Directing the Archive: Hans Richter and the Legacies of the European Avant-garde; N.M.Alter
'Eckmann and Koepnick's anthology Caught by Politics is an innovative cross- cultural examination of the multiple paths of European exiles to the United States that offers new readings about the nature of modernism. By bringing together art history, architectural history, film and media studies the book seeks to complicate Adorno's familiar perspective of exile as an experience of loss, mourning, and rupture, and proposes instead that the exile's life in America provided the opportunity for new and creative ways to engage with modernist art and culture. Essays on Beckmann, Grosz, the Surrealists in the U.S and the reception of refugee artists reveal exilic art, architecture and film as a hybrid of multiple cultural influences and political agendas. The inclusion of provocative essays on architects Peter and Schneider, the horror films of Edgar Ulmer, and the career of actor Peter Lorre enrich this comparatilC>