Dutch Neorealism, Cinema, and the Politics of Painting, 1927–1945
Abstract
This study offers a radically new perspective on Dutch Neorealism, one that emphasizes the role of film as an apparatus, the effects of which, when emulated in painting, can reproduce the affective experience of film-watching. More of a tendency than a tightly defined style or "ism," Neorealism is the Dutch variant of Magic Realism, an uncanny mode of figurative painting identified with Neue Sachlichkeit in Germany and Novecento in Italy. Best represented by the Dutch artists Pyke Koch, Carel Willink, Charley Toorop, Raoul Hynckes, Dick Ket, and Wim Schuhmacher, Neorealism—as demonstrated in this book—depicted societal disintegration and allegories of looming disaster in reaction to the rise of totalitarian regimes and, eventually, the Nazi Occupation of The Netherlands. The degree to which these artists exhibited either revolutionary or reactionary sentiments—usually corresponding with their political affiliation—is one of the central problematics explored in this text. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, World War II history, and film studies.
Keywords
Nazi; occupation; cinema; artists; Netherlands; Europe; World War I; First World War; Second World War; totalitarian; authoritarian; Magic Realism; realism; figurative; politics; revolutionary; reactionary; self portrait; Old Master; aesthetics; propaganda; National Socialist; nationalism; art history; Nederlandsche Filmliga; Pyke Koch; Charley Toorop; Dick Ket; Nederlandsche Kultuurkamer; ReichDOI
10.4324/9781032680330ISBN
9781040135129, 9781032680262, 9781040135198, 9781032680330, 9781040135129Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2025Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Routledge Research in Art and Politics,Classification
Regional / International studies
History and Archaeology
Media studies
History of art
Theory of art
European history
Second World War
Modern warfare