The Recalcitrant Art
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Author | : Douglas F. Kenney |
Publisher | : SUNY Press |
Total Pages | : 280 |
Release | : 2000-05-18 |
Genre | : Poetry |
ISBN | : 9780791446010 |
Combines the techniques of fiction and nonfiction in order to tell the story of the love between Susette Gontard ("Diotima") and the poet Friedrich Holderlin.
Author | : Douglas F. Kenney |
Publisher | : SUNY Press |
Total Pages | : 276 |
Release | : 2000-05-04 |
Genre | : Poetry |
ISBN | : 9780791446027 |
Combines the techniques of fiction and nonfiction in order to tell the story of the love between Susette Gontard ("Diotima") and the poet Friedrich Holderlin.
Author | : David Hunter Miller |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 870 |
Release | : 1928 |
Genre | : Paris Peace Conference |
ISBN | : |
SCOTT (Copy 1: V.1-2): From the John Holmes Library Collection.
Author | : James Meyer |
Publisher | : University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | : 369 |
Release | : |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 0226521567 |
More than any other decade, the sixties capture our collective cultural imagination. And while many Americans can immediately imagine the sound of Martin Luther King Jr. declaring “I have a dream!” or envision hippies placing flowers in gun barrels, the revolutionary sixties resonates around the world: China’s communist government inaugurated a new cultural era, African nations won independence from colonial rule, and students across Europe took to the streets, calling for an end to capitalism, imperialism, and the Vietnam War. In this innovative work, James Meyer turns to art criticism, theory, memoir, and fiction to examine the fascination with the long sixties and contemporary expressions of these cultural memories across the globe. Meyer draws on a diverse range of cultural objects that reimagine this revolutionary era stretching from the 1950s to the 1970s, including reenactments of civil rights, antiwar, and feminist marches, paintings, sculptures, photographs, novels, and films. Many of these works were created by artists and writers born during the long Sixties who were driven to understand a monumental era that they missed. These cases show us that the past becomes significant only in relation to our present, and our remembered history never perfectly replicates time past. This, Meyer argues, is precisely what makes our contemporary attachment to the past so important: it provides us a critical opportunity to examine our own relationship to history, memory, and nostalgia.
Author | : David Hopkins |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 289 |
Release | : 2000-09-14 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 019284234X |
Following a clear timeline, the author highlights key movements of modern art, giving careful attention to the artists' political and cultural worlds. Styles include Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, Minimalism, Conceptualism, Postmodernism, and performance art. 65 color illustrations. 65 halftones.
Author | : Anton Ehrenzweig |
Publisher | : Univ of California Press |
Total Pages | : 346 |
Release | : 1967 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 9780520020504 |
The author has evolved an altogether new psychology of the artist and the art-work which accounts particularly for the development, significance, possibilities and limitations of modern abstract art.
Author | : Keith Eldon Byerman |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 301 |
Release | : 2012 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 0820330558 |
Clarence Major is an award-winning painter, fiction writer, and poet-as well as an essayist, editor, anthologist, lexicographer, and memoirist. He has been part of twenty-eight group exhibitions, has had fifteen one-man shows, and has published fourteen collections of poetry and nine works of fiction. The author traces Major's life and career from his complex family history in Georgia through his encounters with important literary and artistic figures in Chicago and New York to his present status as a respected writer, artist, teacher, and scholar living in California.
Author | : Pamela M. Potter |
Publisher | : Univ of California Press |
Total Pages | : 408 |
Release | : 2016-06-28 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 0520422724 |
This provocative study asks why we have held on to vivid images of the Nazis’ total control of the visual and performing arts, even though research has shown that many artists and their works thrived under Hitler. To answer this question, Pamela M. Potter investigates how historians since 1945 have written about music, art, architecture, theater, film, and dance in Nazi Germany and how their accounts have been colored by politics of the Cold War, the fall of communism, and the wish to preserve the idea that true art and politics cannot mix. Potter maintains that although the persecution of Jewish artists and other “enemies of the state” was a high priority for the Third Reich, removing them from German cultural life did not eradicate their artistic legacies. Art of Suppression examines the cultural histories of Nazi Germany to help us understand how the circumstances of exile, the Allied occupation, the Cold War, and the complex meanings of modernism have sustained a distorted and problematic characterization of cultural life during the Third Reich.
Author | : Patricia Trutty Coohill |
Publisher | : Springer Science & Business Media |
Total Pages | : 416 |
Release | : 2010-09-02 |
Genre | : Philosophy |
ISBN | : 9048191602 |
Although the creative impulse surges in revolt against everyday reality, breaking through its confines, it makes pacts with that reality’s essential laws and returns to it to modulate its sense. In fact, it is through praxis that imagination and artistic inventiveness transmute the vital concerns of life, giving them human measure. But at the same time art’s inspiration imbues life with aesthetic sense, which lifts human experience to the spiritual. Within these two perspectives art launches messages of specifically human inner propulsions, strivings, ideals, nostalgia, yearnings prosaic and poetic, profane and sacral, practical and ideal, while standing at the fragile borderline of everydayness and imaginative adventure. Art’s creative perduring constructs are intentional marks of the aesthetic significance attributed to the flux of human life and reflect the human quest for repose. They mediate communication and participation in spirit and sustain the relative continuity of culture and history.
Author | : Jana Evans Braziel |
Publisher | : Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | : 311 |
Release | : 2024-02-29 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 1003854397 |
This study focuses on street art and large-scale murals in metropolitan Miami/Dade County, while also foregrounding the diasporic and aesthetic interventions made by migrant and second-generation artists whose families hail from the Caribbean and Latin America. Jana Evans Braziel argues that Caribbean and Latinx street artists define and visually mark the city of Miami as a diasporic, transnational urban space. These artists also help define Miami as a cosmopolitan city, yet one that is also a distinctly Caribbean and Latinx urban space, and simultaneously resist but also (at times reluctantly) participate in the forces of gentrification and urban re/development, particularly through the myriad and complex ways in which street art contributes to city branding and art tourism. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, urban studies, American studies, and Latin American/Caribbean studies.