Modernism's HistoryUNSW Press, 1998 - 376 psl. Encompassing movements from post-impressionism to post-modernism, eminent and widely published art historian Bernard Smith has written a sweeping history, a reformulation of art history in the twentieth century. |
Turinys
Introduction | 1 |
THE RISE OF THE FORMALESQUE | 13 |
Modernity and its modernisms | 15 |
Theoretical sources of the Formalesque | 29 |
Exotic sources of the Formalesque | 52 |
Occult and primitive sources of the Formalesque | 67 |
The creation of the Formalesque | 94 |
THE FORMALESQUE AND TWENTIETHCENTURY MODERNISM | 107 |
Politics and the Formalesque | 197 |
The late Formalesque | 233 |
The Eurusan visual culture | 255 |
The turn to meaning | 272 |
Cultural imperialism and the Formalesque | 305 |
Conclusion | 343 |
References cited | 346 |
365 | |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
abstract art Abstract Expressionism Abstract Expressionists African American architecture art history Art Nouveau artefacts artists autonomy avant-garde Barr Bauhaus became began Bourdieu centre Cézanne classical Clement Greenberg collage colonial colour concept Constructivism Constructivist contemporary craft creative critics critique Cubism cultural imperialism Dada decorative arts developed dialectical distinction dominant Duchamp early emerged established Europe European art Eurusan exhibition exotic Expressionism formal Formalesque aesthetic Formalesque style formalist French Gallery Gauguin German Gombrich Greek Gropius hegemony high art ibid immanent Impressionism increasingly indigenous influence inspired institutionalised interest Japan Japanese art Kandinsky late Formalesque London Malevich Matisse meaning mode modern art MOMA Mondrian Museum nature nihonga nineteenth century occult origins painters Paris period style Picasso political Postmodernism Press primitivism production quoted realism Renaissance Russian social Socialist Socialist Realism society sought Soviet spiritual Surrealism Surrealist symbolic theory theosophy tion tradition twentieth United University visual arts York