Art in theory : the west in the world : an anthology of changing ideas

著者

    • Wood, Paul
    • Wainwright, Leon
    • Harrison, Charles

書誌事項

Art in theory : the west in the world : an anthology of changing ideas

edited by Paul Wood and Leon Wainwright, with Charles Harrison

Wiley-Blackwell, 2021

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 1

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

Summary: "Covers not only the chronologically earliest period in the book but also the most extensive timespan of any part of the anthology: the first text dates from c.1204, the latest from c.1690. With the exception, however, of the first four texts, which form a chronologically separate cluster, all the rest date from the mid-fifteenth century to the late seventeenth century, a period of approximately 250 years. In the arts, this includes the Renaissance as well as the later founding of the French Academie Royale, and with it, the inception of the academic system which not only dominated French art for the next two hundred years but also provided the model that fundamentally shaped art practice throughout Europe. In a broader perspective the timespan also covers the late fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Age of Exploration and the seventeenth-century 'scientific revolution'. By any standards, that amounts to a world-historical epoch, and although the existing volumes of Art in Theory do not encompass Renais

内容説明・目次

内容説明

A ground-breaking new anthology in the Art in Theory series, offering an examination of the changing relationships between the West and the wider world in the field of art and material culture Art in Theory: The West in the World is a ground-breaking anthology that comprehensively examines the relationship of Western art to the art and material culture of the wider world. Editors Paul Wood and Leon Wainwright have included 370 texts, some of which appear in English for the first time. The anthologized texts are presented in eight chronological parts, which are then subdivided into key themes appropriate to each historical era. The majority of the texts are representations of changing ideas about the cultures of the world by European artists and intellectuals, but increasingly, as the modern period develops, and especially as colonialism is challenged, a variety of dissenting voices begin to claim their space, and a counter narrative to western hegemony develops. Over half the book is devoted to 20th and 21st century materials, though the book's unique selling point is the way it relates the modern globalization of art to much longer cultural histories. As well as the anthologized material, Art in Theory: The West in the World contains: A general introduction discussing the scope of the collection Introductory essays to each of the eight parts, outlining the main themes in their historical contexts Individual introductions to each text, explaining how they relate to the wider theoretical and political currents of their time Intended for a wide audience, the book is essential reading for students on courses in art and art history. It will also be useful to specialists in the field of art history and readers with a general interest in the culture and politics of the modern world.

目次

  • Acknowledgements xxvii A Note on the Presentation and Editing of Texts xxviii General Introduction xxxi I Encountering the World 1 Introduction 1 IA Figures of Wealth and Power 9 1 Robert of Clari from The Conquest of Constantinople 1204/1216 9 2 Giovanni di Pian de Carpini ('John of Carpini') from his Journey to the Court of Kuyuk Khan 1245-7 11 3 Marco Polo from The Travels c.1299 13 4 'Sir John Mandeville' from his Travels c.1356 16 5 Various authors on artistic and cultural relations between Italian city states and the Ottoman and Mamluk empires during the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries 18 5 (i) Sigismondo Malatesta of Rimini Letter of introduction for Matteo de' Pasti to Mehmed II 1461 19 5 (ii) Marin Sanudo from his diary for 1 August 1479 20 5 (iii) Mehmed II to the Venetian Senate 1480 20 5 (iv) The Venetian Senate Letter to Mehmed II 1480 21 5 (v) Luca Landucci from his Florentine diary 1487 21 5 (vi) Leonardo da Vinci from a letter to Sultan Bayezid II before 1512 22 5 (vii) Tommaso di Tolfo from a letter to Michelangelo 1519 22 6 Giovanni da Empoli On India, Ceylon and the Spice Islands 1514 23 7 Joao de Castro from Roteiro de Goa ate Dio 1540s 24 8 Simao de Melo from an inventory of his goods 1570s 26 9 Johann Huyghen van Linschoten On Indian religious art 1596 29 10 Duarte de Sande from 'An Excellent Treatise of the Kingdom of China' c.1590 32 11 Matteo Ricci from his journal c.1582-1610/1615 34 12 Jean-Baptiste Tavernier On the Peacock Throne 38 IB Across the Ocean Sea 40 1 Christopher Columbus Two texts from his first voyage to America 1492 40 2 Amerigo Vespucci Letter to Lorenzo Pietro Franco de Medici 1503 43 3 Hernan Cortes Two letters from Mexico 1519 and 1520 45 4 Bartolome de Las Casas from Apologetic History of the Indies c.1542-52 48 5 Toribio de Benavente ('Motolinia') from History of the Indians of New Spain 1536 51 6 First Provincial Council in Lima 1551-2 On the destruction of Indian sacred sites 52 7 Jean de Lery from History of a Voyage to the Land of Brazil c.1563-80 53 8 Thomas Harriot from A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia 1590 54 9 Bernardo de Balbuena from Grandeza Mexicana 1604 57 10 Juan Rodriguez Freile On the legend of El Dorado 1636 60 11 John Lok A Voyage to Guinea in the year 1554 61 12 Olfert Dapper On the city of Benin 1668 62 13 William Dampier The first encounter with Indigenous Australian people c.1688/99 64 IC Scholarly Responses 66 1 Anon. from the Inventory of the Palazzo Medici 1492 66 2 Albrecht Durer from his diary of his journey to the Netherlands 1520 70 3 Thomas Platter On Mr Cope's cabinet of curiosities 1599 71 4 Michel de Montaigne 'On the Cannibals' c.1580s 74 5 Christopher Marlowe from Tamburlaine the Great c.1590 76 6 Francis Bacon 'Of Plantations' c.1597-1625 77 7 Francis Bacon from New Atlantis c.1620-5 79 8 Martin de Charmois from his Petition to the King and to the Lords of his Council 1648 81 9 Dorothy Osborne from letters to Sir William Temple 1653 82 10 Thomas Hobbes 'Of the Naturall Condition of Mankind' 1651 83 11 John Tradescant from the Museum Tradescantianum, or A Collection of Rarities 1656 83 12 John Dryden on the 'Noble Savage' 1670-2 91 13 Aphra Behn from Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave c.1663-4/1688 91 14 Charles Perrault from Parallel of the Ancients and Moderns 1688 93 15 William Temple On the distinctiveness of Chinese gardens 1690 94 16 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz from 'Preface' to Novissima Sinica c.1690 96 17 John Locke 'Of Property', from Two Treatises of Government c.1690 98 II Enlightenment and Expansion 101 Introduction 101 IIA The Orient in Fact and Fancy 109 1 Antoine Galland Preface to d'Herbelot's Bibliotheque Orientale 1697 109 2 Anon. from The Arabian Nights Entertainments 1713 111 3 Lady Mary Wortley Montagu Letters from the Turkish Empire c.1716-18 114 4 Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu from Persian Letters 1721 119 5 Joseph Addison from 'The Pleasures of the Imagination' 1712 120 6 John Shebbeare 'The taste of England at present ...' 1756 121 7 Oliver Goldsmith from The Citizen of the World 1765 122 8 Sir William Chambers from A Dissertation on Oriental Gardening 1772 124 9 Sir William Jones from his Discourses to the Asiatick Society of Bengal 1784 and 1785 127 10 William Beckford of Fonthill from Vathek 1786 130 11 Sir George Staunton from his account of the Macartney embassy to China 1797 133 IIB Curiosities and Colonies 137 1 Hans Sloane from The Natural History of Jamaica c.1690/1707 137 2 Jonathan Swift from Gulliver's Travels 1726 138 3 Louis Antoine de Bougainville On Tahiti 1768/72 140 4 A selection of texts from the Cook voyages to the Pacific 1768-80 143 4 (i) Joseph Banks On two figures and a Marae, or temple precinct, in Tahiti June 1769 145 4 (ii) James Cook Two accounts of the practice of tattooing 147 (a) in Tahiti July 1769 (b) in New Zealand March 1770 4 (iii) James Cook On the people of Australia April to August 1770 148 4 (iv) William Wales An account of music and dancing in Tahiti 1773 150 4 (v) George Forster An account of artefacts at Tonga October 1773 152 4 (vi) George Forster On the stone statues and wood carvings of Easter Island March 1774 153 5 Ignatius Sancho and Laurence Sterne An exchange of letters 1766 155 6 Manuel Amat y Junyent, Viceroy of Peru Letter on 'Casta' paintings 1770 157 7 Ignatius Sancho Letter to Jack Wingrave 1778 158 8 William Hodges from Travels in India 1780-3/1794 159 9 Thomas Jefferson from Notes on the State of Virginia 1787 162 10 Olaudah Equiano On the Middle Passage 1789 164 11 William Beckford of Somerley from A Descriptive Account of the Island of Jamaica 1790 167 12 Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802) On revolution, slavery and the Wedgwood medallion 1791 170 IIC Changing Ideas and Values 172 1 David Hume from 'Of National Characters' 1748 172 2 Jean-Jacques Rousseau from 'A Discourse on the Moral Effects of the Arts and Sciences' 1750 174 3 Comte de Caylus from A Collection of the Antiquities of Egypt 1752 177 4 Voltaire (Francois-Marie Arouet) from Essay on the Manners and Spirit of Nations 1756/9 180 5 Voltaire (Francois-Marie Arouet) from 'Essay on Taste' 1759 184 6 Immanuel Kant from Observations on the Feeling of the Beautiful and the Sublime 1763 185 7 Johann Joachim Winckelmann from The History of Ancient Art 1764 188 8 John Millar Notes on the 'Four Stages' theory of human development 1760s 190 9 Denis Diderot 'Supplement to the Voyage of Bougainville' 1772 191 10 Johann Gottfried Herder from A Monument to Johann Winckelmann 1778 194 11 Samuel Johnson On the state of nature 1766-84 197 12 Antoine Quatremere de Quincy from Egyptian Architecture 1785 199 13 Joshua Reynolds from his Discourses 1776 and 1786 202 14 Edward Gibbon Reflections on civilization and barbarism 1788 205 III Revolution, Romanticism, Reaction 209 Introduction 209 IIIA History: Between Spirit and Science 215 1 Johann Gottfried Herder from Outlines of a Philosophy of the History of Man 1790 215 2 Charles Bell from Essays on the Anatomy of Expression in Painting 1806 218 3 Friedrich Schlegel 'On the Language and Philosophy of the Indians' 1808 221 4 Joseph Fourier from 'Historical Preface' to the Description of Egypt 1809 224 5 Edward Moor from The Hindu Pantheon 1810 226 6 Richard Payne Knight from An Inquiry into the Symbolical Language of Ancient Art and Mythology 1818 230 7 John Flaxman 'Style' c.1810-26 233 8 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel from Aesthetics: Lectures on Fine Art 1823-9 235 9 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel from Lectures on the Philosophy of World History 1830-1 241 10 John L. Stephens from Incidents of Travel in Yucatan 1843 244 11 Arthur Schopenhauer 'On Human Nature' c.1845-50 247 12 Gottfried Semper from The Four Elements of Architecture 1851 249 IIIB Visions of the Exotic 253 1 Samuel Taylor Coleridge 'Kubla Khan' 1798 253 2 Maria Edgeworth from The Absentee 1812 255 3 George Gordon, Lord Byron from The Giaour 1813 256 4 Thomas De Quincey from Confessions of an English Opium-Eater 1821 261 5 Johann Wolfgang Goethe from the West-Eastern Divan c.1814-19 264 6 Giacomo Leopardi from Zibaldone 1820-3 268 7 Alfred, Lord Tennyson from 'Timbuctoo' 1829 271 8 Eugene Delacroix Letters and notes on his journey to North Africa 1832 274 9 George Catlin 'Letter from the Mouth of the Yellowstone River' 1832 279 10 John Constable from 'Discourses' 1836 281 11 David Roberts From his travels to Egypt and the Middle East 1838-9 282 12 Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Notes on the Turkish Baths n.d. 285 IIIC Missionaries, Managers and Resistance 289 1 Thomas Paine from Rights of Man 1792 289 2 William Blake from America, a Prophecy 1793 292 3 Mirza Abu Talib (or Taleb) Khan from his Travels 1799/1800 293 4 Lady Maria Nugent from her journal 1801-5 297 5 William Wordsworth To Toussaint L'Ouverture 1802 299 6 James Mill from The History of British India 1817 300 7 Percy Bysshe Shelley 'Ozymandias' 1817 305 8 Henry Salt and Joseph Banks Two letters 1818-19 306 9 John Davy from An Account of the Interior of Ceylon 1821 307 10 William Ellis from Polynesian Researches 1829 309 11 Ram Raz from Essay on the Architecture of the Hindus 1834 313 12 Thomas Babington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay Minute on Indian Education 1835 317 13 James Mallord William Turner, William Makepeace Thackeray and John Ruskin Three texts relating to J. M. W. Turner's Slave Ship 1840 and 1843 320 IV Modernity and Empire 325 Introduction 325 IVA Enduring Fictions and Transformed Spaces 329 1 Theophile Gautier from 'Art in 1848' 1848 329 2 Theophile Gautier On Gerome and Artistic Orientalism 1856 330 3 Theophile Thore, writing as William Burger, from 'New Tendencies in Art' 1857 332 4 Edmond and Jules de Goncourt on Japanese art 1861-4 334 5 Various authors on Japanese art and the 'painting of modern life' 336 5 (i) Charles Baudelaire from a letter to Arsene Houssaye 1861 336 5 (ii) Emile Zola On Manet 1867 337 5 (iii) Edmond Duranty On 'the new painting' 1876 338 5 (iv) Stephane Mallarme from 'The Impressionists and Edouard Manet' 1876 339 5 (v) Theodore Duret On Japan 1878 340 5 (vi) Felix Feneon from 'The Impressionists in 1886' 1886 340 5 (vii) Vincent Van Gogh On Japan 1888 341 6 Philippe Burty 'Ancient Japan and Modern Japan' 1878 342 7 Joris-Karl Huysmans from A Rebours 1884 345 8 Pierre Loti from The Marriage of Loti 1872/1878-9 345 9 A cluster of texts on Gauguin and Oceania 347 9 (i) Paul Gauguin from three letters written before leaving for Polynesia 1890 348 9 (ii) Paul Gauguin from Noa Noa c.1894 349 9 (iii) August Strindberg and Paul Gauguin from an exchange of letters 1895 352 9 (iv) Paul Gauguin from Avant et apres, Atuona, Hiva-Oa 1903 353 10 Hermann Bahr Review of the Japanese exhibition at the sixth exhibition of the Vienna secession 1900 354 IVB Society, Evolution and the Idea of 'Race' 357 1 Robert Knox from The Races of Men 1850 357 2 Joseph-Arthur, Comte de Gobineau from The Inequality of Human Races 1853-5 361 3 Solomon Northup from Twelve Years a Slave 1854 364 4 John Ruskin from The Two Paths 1858-9 366 5 Ernest Renan from 'The Position of the Shemitic Nations in the History of Civilization' 1862 369 6 Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels On the emergence of the world system 1848 372 7 Karl Marx On the 'Asiatic mode of production' and modern capitalism 1853 373 8 The First International Address to the people of the United States of America 1865 376 9 Edmond de Goncourt from the Goncourt Journal 1871 377 10 Charles Darwin from The Descent of Man 1871/1874 378 11 Friedrich Nietzsche 'Signs of Higher and Lower Culture' 1878 381 12 Encyclopaedia Britannica Ninth edition: 'Negro' 1884 384 13 W. T. Stead 'To All English-speaking Folk' 1891 387 14 R. H. Bacon from Benin: The City of Blood 1897 388 15 Rudyard Kipling 'The White Man's Burden' 1899 390 IVC Anthropology, Museums and the Origins of Art 393 1 Owen Jones from The Grammar of Ornament 1856 393 2 Edward Tylor from Primitive Culture 1871 398 3 Augustus Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers 'Principles of Classification' 1874 401 4 J. G. Frazer from The Golden Bough 1890 404 5 Ernst Grosse 'Ethnology and Aesthetics' 1891 407 6 Henry Balfour from The Evolution of Decorative Art 1893 410 7 Alfred Haddon from Evolution in Art 1895 414 8 Alois Riegl from Problems of Style 1893 417 9 Alois Riegl 'The Place of the Vapheio Cups in the History of Art' 1900 423 10 George Birdwood 'Conventionalism in Primitive Art' 1903 425 IVD The World in View: Travellers and Teachers 428 1 Gerard de Nerval from Scenes of Life in the Orient 1843/6-7 428 2 Gustave Flaubert On the pyramids 1850 430 3 Hiram Bingham from A Residence of Twenty-One Years in the Sandwich Islands 1847 431 4 Sir Colin Campbell Letter to Lord Stanley 1846 434 5 Andrew Nicoll 'A Sketching Tour of Five Weeks in the Forests of Ceylon' 1848/52 436 6 Robert Fortune from A Residence Among the Chinese 1857 438 7 James Fergusson from History of Indian Architecture 1876 442 8 Rajendralal Mitra from Indo-Aryans 1881 447 9 Robert Louis Stevenson On the South Seas 1889-90 451 10 C. H. Read and O. M. Dalton 'Works of Art from Benin City' 1898 452 11 Henry Ling Roth 'Primitive Art from Benin' 1899 456 12 Mary Kingsley from West African Studies 1899/1901 458 V The Significance of the 'Primitive' 463 Introduction 463 VA Authenticity, Form and Feeling 467 1 A cluster of short texts on the initial encounter of the European avant-garde with African art in 1906-7 467 1 (i) Andre Derain Letter to Maurice de Vlaminck, March 1906 468 1 (ii) Maurice de Vlaminck On his 'discovery' of African art in 1906 469 1 (iii) Henri Matisse On his encounter with African Art in 1906 470 1 (iv) Pablo Picasso On his visit to the Trocadero museum in 1907 471 2 Wilhelm Worringer from Abstraction and Empathy 1908 473 3 Roger Fry 'The Art of the Bushmen' 1910 476 4 Guillaume Apollinaire 'Exoticism and Ethnography' 1912 480 5 Franz Marc Letter to August Macke 1911 482 6 Franz Marc 'The Savages of Germany' 1912 483 7 August Macke 'Masks' 1912 484 8 Emil Nolde 'On Primitive Art' 1912 485 9 Alexander Shevchenko 'Neo-Primitivism' 1913 486 10 Henri Matisse On his visits to North Africa 1913 489 11 Paul Klee On his visit to Tunisia 1914 491 12 Hermann Bahr from Expressionism 1916 492 VB The Reach of Empire 494 1 James A. Hobson from Imperialism 1902 494 2 Charles Augustus Stoddard from Cruising Among the Caribbees 1895/1903 496 3 Edward Wilmot Blyden 'West Africa Before Europe' 1903 499 4 Kakuso Okakura from The Ideals of the East 1903 502 5 Sister Nivedita 'Introduction' to Okakura's The Ideals of the East 1903 504 6 W. E. B. Du Bois from The Souls of Black Folk 1903 505 7 from the Harmsworth History of the World On the 'degeneration' of indigenous Australians 1908 508 8 Ananda Coomaraswamy 'The Aims of Indian Art' 1908 509 9 E. B. Havell 'The New Indian School of Painting' 1908 512 10 Lucien Levy-Bruhl from How Natives Think 1910/26 514 11 Leo Frobenius from The Voice of Africa 1913 519 12 Sigmund Freud from Totem and Taboo 1913 523 VI In a World of Colonies 529 Introduction 529 VIA Modern, Primitive, Universal 535 1 Guillaume Apollinaire 'On the Art of the Blacks' 1917 535 2 Guillaume Apollinaire On African and Oceanic sculptures 1918 537 3 Roger Fry 'Negro Sculpture' 1920 538 4 Florent Fels et al. 'Opinions on Negro Art' 1920 541 5 Herbert Read from Art Now 1933 544 6 James Johnson Sweeney 'The Art of Negro Africa' 1935 545 7 Alain Locke 'African Art: Classic Style' 1935 549 8 Robert Goldwater 'A Definition of Primitivism' 1938 551 9 Margaret Preston 'Paintings in Arnhem Land' 1940 554 10 Henry Moore 'Primitive Art' 1941 556 11 A cluster of short texts by American painters of the 1940s on primitive art and myth 557 11 (i) Adolph Gottlieb and Mark Rothko Statement 1943 558 11 (ii) Adolph Gottlieb and Mark Rothko from 'The Portrait and the Modern Artist' 1943 559 11 (iii) Jackson Pollock Answers to a questionnaire 1944 560 11 (iv) Barnett Newman 'Pre-Columbian Stone Sculpture' 1944 560 11 (v) Barnett Newman 'Art of the South Seas' 1946 561 11 (vi) Barnett Newman 'Northwest Coast Indian Painting' 1946 562 11 (vii) Jackson Pollock Statement 1947/8 563 11 (viii) Mark Rothko from 'The Romantics were prompted ...' 1947/8 563 VIB Western Civilization: For and Against 565 1 Rosa Luxemburg from The Accumulation of Capital - an Anti-Critique 1915 565 2 Hermann Hesse 'The European' 1918 566 3 Ezra Pound from Hugh Selwyn Mauberley 1919 569 4 Oswald Spengler from The Decline of the West 1918 571 5 Rabindranath Tagore from Creative Unity 1922 574 6 The Third International 'The Black Question' 1922 577 7 W. E. B. Du Bois 'Criteria of Negro Art' 1926 579 8 Franz Boas from Primitive Art 1927 581 9 Alain Locke 'Art or Propaganda' 1928 584 10 Sigmund Freud from Civilization and Its Discontents 1930 586 11 Alfred Rosenberg from The Myth of the Twentieth Century 1930 589 12 Leo Frobenius 'Reflections on African Art' 1931 591 13 Walter Benjamin 'Experience and Poverty' 1933 595 14 Narranyeri (attributed to David Unaipon) 'A Blackfellow's Appeal to White Australia' 1934 597 15 Edmund Husserl from 'The Vienna Lecture' 1935 599 16 Julius Lips from The Savage Hits Back 1937 603 17 Fernando Ortiz 'The Social Phenomenon of "Transculturation"' 1940 606 18 Eric Williams from Capitalism and Slavery 1944 609 VIC The Challenge of the Avant-Garde 612 1 Voldemars Matvejas/'Vladimir Markov' 'Negro Art' 1912-14/19 612 2 Carl Einstein from Negerplastik 1915 615 Contents xxi 3 Tristan Tzara 'Chanson du serpent'/'Song of the Snake' 1917 619 4 Oswald de Andrade 'Cannibalist Manifesto' 1928 621 5 Sergei Eisenstein 'The Cinematographic Principle and the Ideogram' 1929 624 6 Len Lye Two letters 1929/30 629 7 The Surrealist group in Paris 'Don't Visit the Colonial Exhibition' 1931 631 8 The Surrealist group at the Sorbonne from Legitimate Defence 1932 633 9 The Surrealist group in Paris 'Murderous Humanitarianism' 1934 635 10 Michel Leiris from L'Afrique fantome/Phantom Africa 1934 637 11 Antonin Artaud 'What I Came to Mexico to Do' 1936 641 12 Josef Albers 'Truthfulness in Art' 1937 643 13 Art et Liberte group, Cairo 'Long Live Degenerate Art' 1938 647 14 Aime Cesaire from Notebook of a Return to My Native Land 1939 648 15 Claude Levi-Strauss 'The Art of the Northwest Coast' 1943 653 16 Pierre Mabille 'The Jungle' 1945 656 VII Independence and the Post-colonial 661 Introduction 661 VIIA Resituating Theory and Politics 667 1 Jean-Paul Sartre from Black Orpheus 1948 667 2 Aime Cesaire from Discourse on Colonialism 1950/5 670 3 Claude Levi-Strauss from Tristes Tropiques 1955 675 4 Roland Barthes 'African Grammar' 1955/7 679 5 Frantz Fanon from 'On National Culture' 1959 683 6 George Kubler from The Shape of Time 1962 686 7 Michel Foucault from The Order of Things 1966 690 8 Edward Said from Orientalism 1978 694 9 Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari from Mille plateaux 1980 698 10 Johannes Fabian from Time and the Other 1983 702 VIIB Exhibitions, Museums and Histories Reimagined 706 1 Andre Malraux from 'Museum Without Walls' 1954 706 2 Aime Cesaire On the institution of the museum 1955 709 3 Carl Sandburg and Edward Steichen from The Family of Man 1955 710 4 Roland Barthes 'The Great Family of Man' 1956/7 713 5 Georges Bataille 'The Cradle of Humanity' 1959 715 6 Leopold Sedar Senghor from the First World Festival of Black Arts 1966 719 7 Robert Farris Thompson 'Yoruba Artistic Criticism' 1973 722 8 Ian Burn 'Art is what we do, culture is what we do to other artists' 1973 725 9 Linda Nochlin from 'The Imaginary Orient' 1982 729 10 Luis Camnitzer 'Report from Havana: The First Biennial of Latin American Art' 1984 731 11 William Rubin from 'Primitivism' in 20th Century Art 1984 734 12 James Clifford 'Histories of the Tribal and the Modern' 1985 738 13 Martin Bernal from Black Athena 1987 742 VIIC Beyond Modernism 746 1 David A. Siqueiros 'Towards a New Integral Art' 1948 746 2 Kazuo Shiraga 'The Shaping of the Individual' 1956 748 3 Ad Reinhardt 'Timeless in Asia' 1960 750 4 George Maciunas Fluxus Manifesto 1962 751 5 Anni Albers 'Tapestry' 1965 752 6 Helio Oiticica from 'General Scheme of the New Objectivity' 1967 and 'Tropicalia' 1968 754 7 Maria Teresa Gramuglio and Nicolas Rosa Tucuman Burns 1968 758 8 Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore from War and Peace in the Global Village 1968 761 9 Robert Smithson 'Incidents of Mirror-Travel in the Yucatan' 1969 764 10 Nam June Paik 'Global Groove and the Video Common Market' 1970 767 11 Joseph Beuys 'Manifesto on the Foundation of a "Free International School for Creativity and Interdisciplinary Research"' 1973 770 12 Terry Smith 'The Provincialism Problem' 1974 773 13 Robert Morris 'Aligned with Nazca' 1975 776 14 Lothar Baumgarten from 'Conquering the Southern Continent in the Haze of a Sixpenny Cigar' 1978/2010 780 15 Alfredo Jaar Statement 1984 783 VIID Asserting Identity 785 1 F. N. Souza 'Nirvana of a Maggot' 1955 785 2 James Baldwin 'Princes and Powers' 1957 788 3 Uche Okeke 'Growth of an Idea' 1959 and 'Natural Synthesis' 1960 792 4 Aubrey Williams 'The Predicament Of The Artist In The Caribbean' 1968 794 5 Larry Neal from 'The Black Arts Movement' 1968 796 6 Frank Bowling 'It's Not Enough to Say Black is Beautiful' 1971 798 7 Faith Ringgold Interview on For The Women's House 1972 802 8 Papa Ibra Tall 'Negritude and Contemporary Plastic Art' 1972 806 9 Edward 'Kamau' Brathwaite from Contradictory Omens 1974 808 10 Rasheed Araeen 'Preliminary Notes for a Black Manifesto' 1978 813 11 Ana Mendieta 'Introduction' to Dialectics of Isolation 1980 816 12 Isaac Julien and Kobena Mercer 'De Margin and De Centre' 1988 817 VIII The Global Turn 821 Introduction 821 VIIIA Critical Revisions: Theory and History 827 1 Rasheed Araeen 'Why Third Text?' 1987 827 2 Peter Wollen 'Tourism, Language and Art' 1990 830 3 Homi K. Bhabha 'The Postcolonial and the Postmodern' 1992/4 833 4 Arjun Appadurai from Modernity at Large 1996 836 5 Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri from Empire 2000 840 6 Irit Rogoff On visual culture 2000 844 7 Richard Bell 'Bell's Theorem: Aboriginal Art - It's a White Thing' 2003 847 8 Dipesh Chakrabarty from Provincializing Europe 2000 852 9 Immanuel Wallerstein from World-Systems Analysis 2004 855 10 James Elkins from is Art History Global? 2007 858 11 Partha Mitter 'Decentering Modernism' 2008 862 12 Fredric Jameson from A Singular Modernity 2012 865 13 Aruna D'Souza Introduction to In the Wake of the Global Turn 2014 869 14 Peter Weibel 'Modernity Reset: Renaissance 2.0' 2016 872 VIIIB Diversity, Translation, Creolization and Identity 876 1 Stuart Hall 'New Ethnicities' 1988 876 2 Edouard Glissant 'Creolisation and the Americas' 1992 880 3 Sonia Boyce and Manthia Diawara 'The Art of Identity: A Conversation' 1996 883 4 Paul Gilroy from The Black Atlantic 1993 888 5 Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gomez-Pena Interview with Anna Johnson 1993 891 6 Sarat Maharaj 'Perfidious Fidelity
  • the Untranslatability of the Other' 1994 894 7 Gordon Bennett Letter to Jean-Michel Basquiat 1998 897 8 Antonio Benitez-Rojo 'Three Words toward Creolization' 1998 899 9 Edward Said 'The Art of Displacement' 2000 902 10 Fred Wilson and Kwame Anthony Appiah 'Fragments of a Conversation' 2006 905 11 Homi K. Bhabha 'Another Country' 2006 909 12 Yinka Shonibare Interview with Bernard Muller 2007 913 13 Fiona Tan 'Other Facets of the Same Globe' 2009 916 14 Lubaina Himid 'We are Us not Other' 2012 919 15 Kara Walker 'A Sonorous Subtlety': an interview with Kara Rooney 2014 922 16 Fred Moten On the art of Chris Ofili, from 'Blue Vespers' 2017 925 VIIIC Global Art and the Museum 930 1 Jean-Hubert Martin Preface to Magiciens de la terre 1989 930 2 Rasheed Araeen from The Other Story 1989 933 3 Llilian Llanes Godoy 'Introduction' to the Third Havana Biennial 1989 937 4 Luis Camnitzer, Jane Farver and Rachel Weiss 'Foreword' to Global Conceptualism 1999 941 5 Salah M. Hassan and Olu Oguibe from Authentic/Ex-Centric 2002 945 6 Okwui Enwezor 'The Black Box' 2002 948 7 Artforum Roundtable discussion on 'Global Tendencies' 2003 953 8 Kwame Anthony Appiah 'Whose Culture is It Anyway?' 2006 957 9 Chin-Tao Wu 'Biennials Without Borders?' 2009 961 10 Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak 2012 'Sign and Trace' 965 11 Hans Belting and Andrea Buddensieg 'From Art World to Art Worlds' 2013 969 12 Clementine Deliss 'Stored Code' and 'Foreign Exchange' 2012/14 972 VIIID Concerning the Contemporary 976 1 Geeta Kapur 'Contemporary Cultural Practice: Some Polemical Categories' 1990 976 2 Slavoj i ek 'Multiculturalism, or, the Cultural Logic of Multinational Capitalism' 1997 979 3 Nicolas Bourriaud from Relational Aesthetics 1998/2002 982 4 William Kentridge Interview with Dan Cameron 2000/1 987 5 Grant Kester 'A Critical Framework for Dialogical Practice' 2004 990 6 Terry Smith from What is Contemporary Art? 2009 994 7 Hal Foster, Miwon Kwon, Chika Okeke-Agulu, Alexander Alberro, Christopher P. Heuer, Matthew Jesse Jackson and Andrew Perchuk, Responses to a questionnaire on 'The Contemporary' 2009 998 8 Ai Weiwei 'Epilogue' to his blog 2006-9 1005 9 Francis Alys 'Francis Alys: A to Z' 2010 1008 10 Romuald Hazoume Cargoland 2012 1011 11 Gerardo Mosquera 'Beyond Anthropophagy' 2013 1013 12 Xu Bing 'On Holding a Retrospective' 2014 1017 13 Doris Salcedo 'A Work in Mourning' 2014/15 1018 14 Hito Steyerl 'If You Don't Have Bread, Eat Art!' 2017 1021 15 Art & Language from Flags for Organisations 2018 1025 Bibliography 1028 Copyright Acknowledgements 1058 Index 1086

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BC03283817
  • ISBN
    • 9781444336313
  • LCCN
    2020043586
  • 出版国コード
    us
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Hoboken, NJ
  • ページ数/冊数
    pages cm
  • 分類
  • 件名
ページトップへ