Counter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 155 The Arts & Metapolitics
62 minutes / 141 words To listen in a player, click here. To download the mp3, right-click here and choose “save target or link as.” To subscribe to our podcasts, click here for iTunes and here for...
View ArticleFrancis Bacon: The Dark Theology of Meat
2,046 words Francis Bacon, 1909–1992 Francis Bacon was an extraordinary and extreme artist and one of the greatest painters of the twentieth century. He was also a Right-wing elitist and individualist...
View ArticleMake Weimerica Grate Again:A Review of the “Daddy Will Save Us” Art Show
796 words Last Saturday night in Manhattan, a few good shitlords made art history. At the “Daddy Will Save Us” art show, event organizer Lucian Wintrich stated that this was “the first conservative art...
View ArticleThe Alt Right & the Arts
2,386 words Vig Scholma, Furor Teutonicus The Road to Alt Right Artistry Since Hillary Clinton’s mention of the Alternative Right in one of her speeches, there have been countless discussions about...
View ArticleCounter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 167 The Northwest Forum What’s Wrong with...
Charles Krafft in his bunker 44:25 / 102 words To listen in a player, click here. To download the mp3, right-click here and choose “save target or link as.” To subscribe to our podcasts, click here for...
View ArticleScreening Pedophilia: Egon Schiele: Tod und Mädchen
1,846 words Austrian arthouse film Egon Schiele: Tod und Mädchen is perhaps most disappointing in that Egon Schiele led a very interesting life, yet the scriptwriter Hilde Berger and director Dieter...
View ArticleArt After Metaphysics
1,710 words John David Ebert Art After Metaphysics CreateSpace, 2013 Many readers will be familiar with John David Ebert from his excellent podcast (with Darryl D. Cooper), Decline of the West. In an...
View ArticleVivisecting the Femiblob, Part One
3,264 words Part 1 of 2 For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows. –1 Timothy 6:10...
View ArticleVivisecting the Femiblob, Part Two
3,695 words Part 2 of 2 (Part 1 here) The Advantage of the Other In 1683 the troops of the Ottoman Empire marched to the gates of Vienna, in the very heart of Europe. Their intention was clear: sack...
View ArticleReassessing Otto Dix
Otto Dix, Self-Portrait with My Son 2,221 words Otto Dix was a German artist who is now celebrated as one of the great painters of the twentieth century, probably in no small part because he was put on...
View ArticleAustralian Artists of the Right, Part I Lionel Lindsay
Lionel Lindsay 5,188 words Background: Australianity Nietzsche was a seminal influence on the brothers Norman and Lionel Lindsay, as he was on many other contemporary aesthetes, artists, and literati...
View ArticleGuide to Kulchur Episode 2: The Square
82 words / 76:10 Counter-Currents Book Editor John Morgan joins Fróði Midjord on the new podcast series, Guide to Kulchur, to discuss The Square, a recent Swedish film (available in English) which...
View ArticleRemembering Filippo Marinetti: December 22, 1876–December 2, 1944
Marinetti in the First World War. 173 words Those on the Right who believe that modern art is always “decadent” need to come to grips with Italian Futurism. In commemoration of the birthday of Filippo...
View ArticleA Flash of Dissident Genius in Estonia
The Contemporary Art Museum of Estonia (EKKM), Tallin, Estonia 1,615 words When You Say We Belong to the Light We Belong to the Thunder July–October 2019 First of all, the actual building and location...
View ArticleWhat’s Wrong with the Arts?
5,798 words Editor’s note: The following is the transcript of Charles Krafft’s speech at the Inaugural Meeting of the Northwest Forum in Seattle on November 12, 2016. Some of the audience questions...
View ArticleRemembering Filippo Marinetti (December 22, 1876–December 2, 1944)
Marinetti in the First World War. 176 words Those on the Right who believe that modern art is always “decadent” need to come to grips with Italian Futurism. In commemoration of the birthday of Filippo...
View ArticleDay at the Museum: A Special Guided Tour
Marcel Duchamp, Mona Lisa with Moustache, 1919. 5,752 words I’m a recent transplant in this city. And as far as cities go, this one isn’t terrible. We live just over the hill from Erie, one of those...
View ArticleHow Tom Wolfe’s The Painted Word Exposed the Modern Art Racket
4,116 words Visiting an art gallery in Washington, DC long ago, I gazed at amorphous shapes for a good while. Some abstract art is good, speaking directly to the subconscious mind, but this stuff just...
View ArticleRemembering Filippo Marinetti (December 22, 1876–December 2, 1944)
Marinetti in the First World War. 176 words Those on the Right who believe that modern art is always “decadent” need to come to grips with Italian Futurism. In commemoration of the birthday of Filippo...
View ArticleMake Art Great Again: The Good Optics of Salvador Dalí, Part 1
6,241 words Part 1 of 3 (Part 2 here) Christopher Heath Brown, Jean-Pierre Isbouts The Dalí Legacy: How an Eccentric Genius Changed the Art World and Created a Lasting Legacy Apollo Publishers, 2021...
View ArticleMake Art Great Again: The Good Optics of Salvador Dalí, Part 2
Salvador Dalí, The Persistence of Memory 5,672 words Part 2 of 3 (Part 1 here, Part 3 here) This excursus has prematurely broached The Gala Situation, so let’s go back to where we started, with Dalí...
View ArticleMake Art Great Again: The Good Optics of Salvador Dalí, Part 3
Salvador Dalí, Perpignan Train Station 5,557 words Part 3 of 3 (Part 1 here, Part 2 here) With Young Virgin Auto-Sodomized by Her Own Chastity, Dalí returned to his paranoiac-critical concerns (i.e.,...
View ArticleChristopher Pankhurst’s Numinous Machines
You can buy Christopher Pankhurst’s Numinous Machines here. 2,455 words Christopher Pankhurst Numinous Machines San Francisco, Calif.: Counter-Currents Publishing, 2017 Whenever I read a book with the...
View ArticleThe Union Jackal, August 2022
A self-portrait by Flemish painter Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641), whose work has been deemed too beautiful by the National Museum of Wales such that cardboard boxes have now been placed in front of it....
View ArticleCounter-Currents Radio Podcast No. 534 Interview with Alexander Adams
118 words / 57:22 Greg Johnson welcomed Alexander Adams (WordPress, Substack), author of the recently-published book from Imperium Press Blood, Soil, Paint, to the latest broadcast of Counter-Currents...
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