Juliet Bellow is Assistant Professor of Art History at American University, USA.
'... a comprehensive, densely argued examination of the Ballets Russes in its relation to French avant-garde art... Summing Up: Recommended.' Choice 'Elegantly written and sumptuously illustrated, this wonderful book offers a fascinating journey through the rich intersections between music, painting, the decorative arts, and performance on the Ballets Russes stage. What is at stake here is no less than a rethinking of the concept of modernism from an intermedial perspective. Modernism on Stage is a tour de force not to be missed by anyone interested in the Ballets Russes and the Parisian avant-garde.' French Studies 'The Ballets Russes offered Picasso, Delaunay, Matisse and De Chirico (and their collaborative colleagues) a forum in which to test out key stylistic and conceptual properties of their painterly practice, and these are explored intelligibly and supported by a good number of helpful illustrations. These new perspectives on Diaghliev's troupe are invaluable to anyone interested in the Ballets Russes, the plastic arts and design, or the interaction between the arts and ballet in early twentieth-century Paris.' H-France Review 'Bellow identifies her study as a scholarly Gesamtkunstwerk because of its interdisciplinarity, which is admirable in its breadth and fruitful in producing interpretive insights. Eloquently written, richly illustrated, and printed on glossy paper, the book is an artistic delight in itself.' Russian Review '... Bellow successfully argues that the Ballets Russes, in employing avant-garde artists and designers as diverse as Picasso, Delaunay, Matisse and de Chirico, transposed the hermetic visual language of high modernism to the stage and created a new dialogue with elements long held to be anti-modernist: duration and dimension, figuration and embodiment, kinesthetics and empathy ...' Journal of Design History 'It is no easy task to find one's own place in this cacophony of interpretations and emphasises, but Juliet Bellow's Modernism on Stage: The Ballets Russes and the Parisian Avant-garde succeeds in doing so. ... Bellow is at her strongest in discussing Matisse's design scheme for Le Chant du rossignol and de Chirico's collaboration on Le Bal.' Studies in Costume & Performance