Broom: An International Magazine of the Arts
The exhibition Broom: The Full Sweep, presents all twenty-one
volumes of Broom, the avant-garde magazine published from
November 1921 to January 1924. Broom, along with other
periodicals of its era, was instrumental in introducing Americans
to European avant-garde art through the reproduction of works
by such artists as André Derain, Juan Gris, and George Grosz.
In order to show the full range of the innovative art and literature
published by Broom, this exhibition presents the magazine’s
most renowned works in a display that will change weekly.
As weeks pass and pages turn, this exhibition will trace the
geography of the radical and often controversial works that
Broom’s editors championed over the course of its brief
existence, before censors and a decline in funding led to the
magazine’s demise. The exhibition will highlight original
cover designs by Fernand Léger, El Lissitsky, and Man Ray;
reproductions of drawings by Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso,
and Amedeo Modigliani; photographs by László Moholy-Nagy and Paul Strand; poems by e.e. cummings, Gertrude
Stein, Wallace Stevens, and William Carlos Williams; fiction by
Virginia Woolf and John Dos Passos; and the original English
translations of works by Feodor Dostoyevsky, Robert Musil,
Luigi Pirandello, and Roger Vitrac.
Broom was founded by novelist Harold Loeb, whom Ernest
Hemingway famously used as the model for his character
Robert Cohn in the novel, The Sun Also Rises. In 1920, Loeb
persuaded editor Alfred Kreymborg to join him in editing a
magazine that would provide a forum for new and experimental
art, and with Loeb’s financial backing, Broom set up headquarters
in Rome, where its first ten issues were printed. After the first
year of publication, Kreymborg left, and Loeb moved Broom’s
headquarters from Rome to Berlin, where he published six more
issues before his money ran out. Broom’s Associate Editor,
Matthew Josephson, took over the funding and moved Broom’s
headquarters to New York, where he published five issues, the
last of which was banned by U.S. postal censors.
Broom: The Full Sweep examines the turbulent story of Broom’s
publishing history through an alternating display of Loeb’s
correspondence with writer Sinclair Lewis, artists Henri
Matisse and Paul Strand, and art collectors Leo Stein and
Albert Barnes. These letters, presented in facsimile, tell a
behind-the-scenes story of what publishing an international
arts periodical in the 1920s entailed.
—Daniel Mason, Curator
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