Esthetic recognition of ancient Amerindian art

Bibliographic Information

Esthetic recognition of ancient Amerindian art

George Kubler

(Yale publications in the history of art)

Yale University Press, c1991

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 243-270) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this book George Kubler considers the aesthetic responses of native Americans, Europeans, and Americanists to indigenous art of the Americas. Chronicling the lives and writings of 70 historians, explorers, missionaries, archaeologists, anthropologists and art historians from 1492-1984, he focuses on how these individuals differed in their ways of evaluating Amerindian art forms, and what this reveals about the art and about the development aesthetic thought. Drawing on a variety of sources, Kubler presents the impressions of figures such as Columbus and Darwin, and includes in his discussion drawings and photographs by travellers and explorers. In this original book, Kubler's historigraphic approach should allow us to view Amerindian art from a fresh perspective.

Table of Contents

  • American antiquity
  • salvaging Amerindian antiquity before 1700
  • idealist studies of Amerindia from above
  • empiric aesthetics from below
  • Americanist historians of art since 1840
  • anthropologists and archaeologists after 1875.

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