De Vijftigers: Difference between revisions

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== Background ==
== Background ==
De Vijftigers opposed the art views of their predecessors. There is a lyric that we abolish, as they put it.These are the poets [[Lucebert]], [[Hugo Claus]] and [[Gerrit Kouwenaar]], [[Remco Campert]] and [[Jan Elburg]]. They had previously become involved with a group of young Danish, Belgian and Dutch artists, who called themselves Cobra, Copenhagen, Brussels, Amsterdam.
De Vijftigers opposed the art views of their predecessors. There is a lyric that we abolish, as they put it.These are the poets [[Lucebert]], [[Hugo Claus]] and [[Gerrit Kouwenaar]], [[Remco Campert]] and [[Jan Elburg]]. They had previously become involved with a group of young Danish, Belgian and Dutch artists, who called themselves Cobra, Copenhagen, Brussels, Amsterdam. According to these Cobra artists-among them Karel Appel, Corneille and Constant – real vital art could only be made by truly free people.


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 09:18, 28 April 2024

De Vijftigers ("Those of the fifties") were a loosely connected group of experimental Dutch and Belgian writers, which was started in the late 1940s and were also connected to the Cobra movement.[1] The group included Hans Andreus, Lucebert, Simon Vinkenoog, Armando, Hugo Claus, and Jan Hanlo, among others.[2][3]

Background

De Vijftigers opposed the art views of their predecessors. There is a lyric that we abolish, as they put it.These are the poets Lucebert, Hugo Claus and Gerrit Kouwenaar, Remco Campert and Jan Elburg. They had previously become involved with a group of young Danish, Belgian and Dutch artists, who called themselves Cobra, Copenhagen, Brussels, Amsterdam. According to these Cobra artists-among them Karel Appel, Corneille and Constant – real vital art could only be made by truly free people.

References

  1. ^ "Dutch literature - The 20th century | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  2. ^ "Vijftigers (1949-1955)". Literatuurgeschiedenis (in Dutch). Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  3. ^ "Vijftigers (1949-1955) | Literatuurgeschiedenis". www.literatuurgeschiedenis.org (in Dutch). Retrieved 2024-04-28.