Art and Politics: A Small History of Art for Social Change Since 1945
Autor Claudia Meschen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 mai 2020
This book will also challenge its readers to consider often devalued and marginalised political artworks as properly part of the history of modern and contemporary art.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350181298
ISBN-10: 1350181293
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 73 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 136 x 212 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350181293
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 73 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 136 x 212 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction: A Prehistory of Political Modernist Art
Chapter 1: State-Sponsored Art, 1949-present
-Zhadnovian socialist realism and 1945: Alexander Deineka
- Postwar Western socialist realisms: André Fougeron; Renato Guttuso; Pablo Picasso; Diego Rivera
- African socialist realisms: Tshibumba kanda Matulu, Congo; Monument to Agostinho Neto, Angola
- American art and the Cold War: Jackson Pollock
- Political Cold War Painting in the west: Sigmar Polke; Eugen Schoenebeck; Erro; Bernard Rancillac; Tseng Kwong Chi
- Wric Bulatov and late-Soviet political painting
Chapter 2: Civil Rights/Postcolonial Movements,1960-
- Art of the Civil Rights movement and its legacies: Romare Bearden; Betye Saar; David Hammons; Lorna Simpson
- Postcolonialist art: Yinka Shonibare; Chris Ofili; Steve McQueen; Bodys Isek Kingelez; Meschac Gaba
Chapter 3: The Anti-War Movement, 1965-
- Vietnam: Leon Golub; Nanacy Spero; Ed Kienholz; Peter Saul; George Segal; Erro ( Gundmundur Gundmundsson); the Guerilla Art Action Group; Mark di Suvero' Groupe Cronica; Wolf Vostell; Martha Rosler
- Afghanistan, the Gulf Wars, and Middle East conflict: Jeff Wall; Harun Farocki; Walid Ra'ad
- Torture: Luis Camnitzer; Doris Salcedo; Francisco Botero
Chapter 4: Feminisim.,1970-
-US feminisims: Womanhouse ( Miriam Shapiro and Judy Chicago); Betye Saar; Carolee Schneeman; Eva Hesse; Ana Mendieta; Barbara Kruger; Cindy Sherman
- European femininisms: Mona Hatoum; Shirin Neshat; Le Groupe Amos (Congo); Wangechi Mutu
Chapter 5: Gay Rights, 1969-
- Gay rights and AIDS activism inside and outside of the artworld: ACTUP; Gran Fury; Group Material; Ross Bleckner; David Wojnarowicz; Martin Wong; Oliviero Toscani ( for Benetton)
- Lesbian identity: Catherine Opie
Chapter 6: Environmentalist Art, 1972-
- Origins of a "land ethic" in art reclamation: Robert Smithson; Hans Haacke; Betty Beaumont; Alan Sonfist; Agnew Denes; Helen Mayer-Harrison and Newton Harrison: Joseph Beuys
- New environmentalism: Mel Chin; kathryn Miller; Ines Doujak; Sokari Douglas-Camp and Platform London; Beatriz da Costa
Chapter 7: Anti-Globalization, 1999-
- In real time and space: Thomas Hirshhorn; Alfredo Jaar; Alighiero Boetti
- Migrants' and Workers' rights: mierle Laderman Ukeles; Yolanda Lopez; Chantal Akermann; Multiplicity; Minerva Cuevas; Huit Facettes ( Senegal); Corie Cole; the Border Film Project
- Informatics Activism: 0100101110101101.ORG; Radical Software Group; Mongrel; Raqs Media Collective
Epilogue: Art and Politics to Come
- Bioethics: Eduardo Kac; Critical Art Ensemble: Tissue Culture & Art
Chapter 1: State-Sponsored Art, 1949-present
-Zhadnovian socialist realism and 1945: Alexander Deineka
- Postwar Western socialist realisms: André Fougeron; Renato Guttuso; Pablo Picasso; Diego Rivera
- African socialist realisms: Tshibumba kanda Matulu, Congo; Monument to Agostinho Neto, Angola
- American art and the Cold War: Jackson Pollock
- Political Cold War Painting in the west: Sigmar Polke; Eugen Schoenebeck; Erro; Bernard Rancillac; Tseng Kwong Chi
- Wric Bulatov and late-Soviet political painting
Chapter 2: Civil Rights/Postcolonial Movements,1960-
- Art of the Civil Rights movement and its legacies: Romare Bearden; Betye Saar; David Hammons; Lorna Simpson
- Postcolonialist art: Yinka Shonibare; Chris Ofili; Steve McQueen; Bodys Isek Kingelez; Meschac Gaba
Chapter 3: The Anti-War Movement, 1965-
- Vietnam: Leon Golub; Nanacy Spero; Ed Kienholz; Peter Saul; George Segal; Erro ( Gundmundur Gundmundsson); the Guerilla Art Action Group; Mark di Suvero' Groupe Cronica; Wolf Vostell; Martha Rosler
- Afghanistan, the Gulf Wars, and Middle East conflict: Jeff Wall; Harun Farocki; Walid Ra'ad
- Torture: Luis Camnitzer; Doris Salcedo; Francisco Botero
Chapter 4: Feminisim.,1970-
-US feminisims: Womanhouse ( Miriam Shapiro and Judy Chicago); Betye Saar; Carolee Schneeman; Eva Hesse; Ana Mendieta; Barbara Kruger; Cindy Sherman
- European femininisms: Mona Hatoum; Shirin Neshat; Le Groupe Amos (Congo); Wangechi Mutu
Chapter 5: Gay Rights, 1969-
- Gay rights and AIDS activism inside and outside of the artworld: ACTUP; Gran Fury; Group Material; Ross Bleckner; David Wojnarowicz; Martin Wong; Oliviero Toscani ( for Benetton)
- Lesbian identity: Catherine Opie
Chapter 6: Environmentalist Art, 1972-
- Origins of a "land ethic" in art reclamation: Robert Smithson; Hans Haacke; Betty Beaumont; Alan Sonfist; Agnew Denes; Helen Mayer-Harrison and Newton Harrison: Joseph Beuys
- New environmentalism: Mel Chin; kathryn Miller; Ines Doujak; Sokari Douglas-Camp and Platform London; Beatriz da Costa
Chapter 7: Anti-Globalization, 1999-
- In real time and space: Thomas Hirshhorn; Alfredo Jaar; Alighiero Boetti
- Migrants' and Workers' rights: mierle Laderman Ukeles; Yolanda Lopez; Chantal Akermann; Multiplicity; Minerva Cuevas; Huit Facettes ( Senegal); Corie Cole; the Border Film Project
- Informatics Activism: 0100101110101101.ORG; Radical Software Group; Mongrel; Raqs Media Collective
Epilogue: Art and Politics to Come
- Bioethics: Eduardo Kac; Critical Art Ensemble: Tissue Culture & Art