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Here is the first comprehensive survey of modern craft in the United States. Makers follows the development of studio craft--objects in fiber, clay, glass, wood, and metal--from its roots in nineteenth-century reform movements to the rich diversity of expression at the end of the twentieth century. More than four hundred illustrations complement this chronological exploration of the American craft tradition. Keeping as their main focus the objects and the makers, Janet Koplos and Bruce Metcalf offer a detailed analysis of seminal works and discussions of education, institutional support, and the philosophical underpinnings of craft.
Decorative arts --- Art, American --- History --- Art, Modern --- Applied arts --- Art industries and trade --- Arts, Applied --- Arts, Decorative --- Arts, Minor --- Minor arts --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- Art --- Handicraft
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During the Cold War, culture became another weapon in America's battle against communism. Part of that effort in cultural diplomacy included a program to arrange the exhibition of hundreds of American paintings overseas. Michael L. Krenn studies the successes, failures, contradictions, and controversies that arose when the U.S. government and the American art world sought to work together to make an international art program a reality between the 1940s and the 1970s. The Department of State, then the United States Information Agency, and eventually the Smithsonian Institution directed
Art and state --- Art, American --- Cold War. --- Propaganda in art. --- World politics --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- United States --- Cultural policy.
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Thornton Dial (b. 1928), one of the most important artists in the American South, came to prominence in the late 1980's and was celebrated internationally for his large construction pieces and mixed-media paintings. It was only later, in response to a reviewer's negative comment on his artistic ability, that he began to work on paper. And it was not until recently that these drawings have received the acclaim they deserve. This volume, edited by Bernard L. Herman, offers the first sustained critical attention to Dial's works on paper. Concentrating on Dial's early drawings, the contributors
Art, American --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- Dial, Thornton --- Themes, motives.
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Jackson Pollock, Georgia O'Keeffe, Andy Warhol, Julian Schnabel, and Laurie Anderson are just some of the major American artists of the twentieth century. From the 1893 Chicago World's Fair to the 2000 Whitney Biennial, a rapid succession of art movements and different styles reflected the extreme changes in American culture and society, as well as America's position within the international art world. This exciting new look at twentieth century American art explores the relationships between American art, museums, and audiences in the century that came to be called the 'American century'...
Art, American --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- 7.038 --- Beeldende kunst ; Verenigde Staten ; 20ste eeuw --- Kunstgeschiedenis ; 1950 - 2000 --- Art américain --- Art --- anno 1900-1999 --- North America --- Art [American ] --- 20th century
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Ben Vautier, Niki De Saint Phalle, François Morellet, Louise Bourgeois, Alexandre Hollan, Claude Viallat, Sophie Calle, Bernard Pagès, Jean-Pierre Pincemin, Annette Messager, Gérard Titus-Carmel: eleven major French artists of the last forty years or so, examined in the light of their uniqueness and their rootedness, the specificities of their differing and at times overlapping plastic practices and the swirling and often highly hybridised conceptions entertained in regard to such practices. Thus does analysis range from discussion of the feisty, Fluxus-inspired, free-spirited funkiness of Ben Vautier’s work to the various modes of transcendence of trauma and haunting fear generated by the exceptional gestures of Niki de Saint Phalle and Louise Bourgeois, to the alyrical formalism yet imbued with irony and ludicity of François Morellet, through to the serene intensities of Alexandre Hollan’s vies silencieuses , the infinite a-signatures of Claude Viallat’s adventure in the sheer joy of a poiein of self-reflexive coloration, the powerfully elegant and muscular disarticulations of Bernard Pagès’ sculpture, the great sweep through art’s history implied by Jean-Pierre Pincemin’s chameleon-like gestures, the vast swirling programme of socio-psychological analysis the arts of Annette Messager and Sophie Calle offer in their radically distinctive manners, the obsessively serialised oeuvre of Gérard Titus-Carmel allowing a burrowing deep into the opaque logic of a real though dubious ‘presence to the world’.
Art, Modern --- Art, Modern. --- Affichistes (Group of artists) --- Fluxus (Group of artists) --- Modernism (Art) --- Schule der Neuen Prächtigkeit (Group of artists) --- Zero (Group of artists) --- Modern art --- Nieuwe Ploeg (Group of artists) --- 1900-1999 --- Art, French --- Faisant (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Untel (Group of artists) --- Pérav' Prod (Group of artists)
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Gérard Garouste, Colette Deblé, Georges Rousse, Geneviève Asse, Martial Raysse, Christian Jaccard, Joël Kermarrec, Danièle Perronne, Daniel Dezeuze, Philippe Favier, Daniel Nadaud: after the eleven essays of Contemporary French Art 1 , devoted to major artists from Ben Vautier and Niki de Saint Phalle to Annette Messager and Gérard Titus-Carmel, the present volume pursues its interrogations of the what , the how and the why of contemporary plastic production of some of France’s finest practitioners. If, as ever, such production can reveal elements of an interweaving of individualized preoccupations and modes, endless specificities demarcate and affirm originalities that pure theory and its leveling anonymity may obscure. Thus is it that Gérard Garouste is alone in that obsession with ‘indianness’ and ‘classicalness’; that Colette Deblé’s gesture is drawn implacably to the unseenness of female representation; that Georges Rousse plunges photography into the realm of matter’s poetic sacredness; that Geneviève Asse traverses a pure seemingness of abstraction to attain to an intimacy of silence; that Martial Raysse’s ‘hygiene of vision’ may endlessly renew and hybridize itself. Christian Jaccard, too, will explore with uniqueness an art of materiality at the frontier of metaphysics; Joël Kermarrec will offer us the inimitable exquisite traces of surging desire and deception; Danièle Perronne’s boxes and stringings, her paintings and her sheetings will unfold a psychic infinity at the heart of form. And, if Daniel Dezeuze seeks namelessness and pure structuration, the latter yet surge forth via works that relentlessly identify a gesture so distant, we may feel, from the at once sobering and ceremonial microproliferations of a Philippe Favier or the tense but genial articulations of Daniel Nadaud’s sculptural imagination.
Art --- anno 1900-1999 --- anno 2000-2009 --- France --- Art, French --- Color in art. --- Visual Arts --- Art, Architecture & Applied Arts --- Visual Arts - General --- Art, Modern --- Faisant (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Untel (Group of artists) --- Pérav' Prod (Group of artists) --- Art, French. --- 1900-2099 --- French art --- Ecole de Nice (Group of artists) --- Forces nouvelles (Group of artists) --- Nabis (Group of artists) --- Ne pas plier (Group of artists) --- Art, French - 20th century --- Art, French - 21st century
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"In 1952, John Cage shocked audiences with 4'33", his compositional ode to the ironic power of silence. From Cage's minimalism to Chris Burden's radical performance art two decades later (in one piece he had himself shot), the post-war American avant-garde shattered the divide between low and high art, between artist and audience. They changed the cultural landscape. Feast of Excess is an engaging and accessible portrait of 'The New Sensibility,' as it was named by Susan Sontag in 1965. The New Sensibility sought to push culture in extreme directions: either towards stark minimalism or gaudy maximalism. Through vignette profiles of prominent figures--John Cage, Patricia Highsmith, Allen Ginsberg, Andy Warhol, Anne Sexton, John Coltrane, Bob Dylan, Erica Jong, and Thomas Pynchon, to name a few--George Cotkin presents their bold, headline-grabbing performances and places them within the historical moment. This inventive and jaunty narrative captures the excitement of liberation in American culture. The roots of this release, as Cotkin demonstrates, began in the 1950s, boomed in the 1960s, and became the cultural norm by the 1970s. More than a detailed immersion in the history of cultural extremism, Feast of Excess raises provocative questions for our present-day culture"--
Artists --- Intellectuals --- Extremists --- Avant-garde (Aesthetics) --- Art, American --- American literature --- Performance art --- History --- History and criticism. --- United States --- Intellectual life --- Civilization --- Arts, Modern --- Happenings (Art) --- Performing arts --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- Fanatics --- Persons --- 20th century --- Biography --- Avant-Garde (Aesthetics) --- Art [American ] --- History and criticism --- 1945 --- -Artists
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Working class in art. --- Art, American --- Working class --- Commons (Social order) --- Labor and laboring classes --- Laboring class --- Labouring class --- Working classes --- Social classes --- Labor --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- Labor and laboring classes in art --- Social conditions. --- Employment --- Federal Art Project --- United States. --- Federal Art Project (U.S.) --- History.
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Art, American --- Art --- Social problems in art. --- Jewish art --- Art, Occidental --- Art, Visual --- Art, Western (Western countries) --- Arts, Fine --- Arts, Visual --- Fine arts --- Iconography --- Occidental art --- Visual arts --- Western art (Western countries) --- Arts --- Aesthetics --- Ethnic art --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- Political aspects --- Art, Primitive
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ROBIN VEDER is an associate professor of humanities and art history/visual culture, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg.
Aesthetics. --- Human body (Philosophy) --- Art, American --- Modernism (Art) --- Art, Modern --- Chicago Imagists (Group of artists) --- Figuration libre (Group of artists) --- Fort Worth Circle (Group of artists) --- Hairy Who (Group of artists) --- Monster Roster (Group of artists) --- Philadelphia Ten (Group of artists) --- Pictures Generation (Group of artists) --- Body, Human (Philosophy) --- Philosophy --- Beautiful, The --- Beauty --- Esthetics --- Taste (Aesthetics) --- Art --- Criticism --- Literature --- Proportion --- Symmetry --- Psychology --- Radio broadcasting Aesthetics --- Aesthetics
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