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In a series of newly commissioned essays by both established and emerging scholars, Globalization and Contemporary Art probes the effects of internationalist culture and politics on art across a variety of media. Globalization and Contemporary Art is the first anthology to consider the role and impact of art and artist in an increasingly borderless world.
First major anthology of essays concerned with the impact of globalization on contemporary art
Extensive bibliography and a full index designed to enable the reader to broaden knowledge of art and its relationship to globalization
Unique analysis of the contemporary art market and its operation in a globalized economy
Auteur
Jonathan Harris is Professor of Global Art & Design Studies for the Winchester School of Art at the University of Southampton. He has published widely on contemporary art history and theory, and is a successful textbook author. His works include The New Art History: A Critical Introduction (2001) and Art History: The Key Concepts (2006).
Texte du rabat
Globalization and Contemporary Art is an unprecedented collection of essays that charts the intersection of art and globalization since the 1980s. The volume provides an authoritative, accessible, comprehensive, and challenging account of the impact of globalization upon contemporary visual art and its socio-cultural spheres of production, circulation, and consumption.
Richly illustrated, this anthology showcases 33 essays from all corners of the world by well-known authors such as W.J.T. Mitchell, Rasheed Araeen, and James Elkins, as well as emerging scholars in art history/theory, visual and museum studies. The collection is deliberately wide-ranging, embracing the subject in all its fullness, diversity and unruliness - from case-studies of artists and artworks to meditations on broader thematic, conceptual, and historiographical topics.
Tackling the subject through a variety of useful analytics - forms and formations, institutions, the production of meaning, identifications, and reproduction - Globalization and Contemporary Art challenges the status of art history as the dominant discipline able to recognize and account for developments in visual art and "art worlds" since the 1980s. Collectively, this set of essays suggests how and why such a necessary re-conceptualization should take place and with what consequences. This is illuminating reading for all students and scholars of art history, visual culture, cultural studies, cultural policy and globalization studies.
Contenu
List of Illustrations.
Notes on Contributors.
Introduction: Globalization and Contemporary Art: A Convergence of Peoples and Ideas (Jonathan Harris).
Part 1: Institutions.
Introduction.
1 Real Time and Real Time at The Israel Museum, Jerusalem (Vivianne Barsky).
2 Peddling Time When Standing Still: Art Remains in Lebanon and the Globalization That Was (Walid Sadek).
3 Homogeneity or Individuation? A Long View of the Critical Paradox of Contemporary Art in a Stateless Nation (Peter Lord).
4 Museums in the Colonial Horizon of Modernity: Fred Wilson's Mining the Museum (1992) (Walter Mignolo).
5 Africus Johannesburg Biennale 1995: Butisi Tart? (Natasha Becker).
Part 2: Formations.
Introduction.
6 Post-Crisis: Scenes of Cultural Change in Buenos Aires (Andrea Giunta).
7 Evolution within the Revolution: The Afro-Cuban Cultural Movement and Cuban Art Collectives, 1975 to 2000 (Zoya Kocur).
8 Ka Muhe'e, He i'a Hololua: Kanaka Maoli Art and the Challenge of the Global Market (Herman Pi'ikea Clark).
9 Aboriginal Cosmopolitans: A Prehistory of Western Desert Painting (Ian McLean).
10 Working to Learn Together: Failure as Tactic (Judith Rodenbeck).
Part 3: Means and Forces of Production.
Introduction.
11 The Two Economies of World Art (Malcolm Bull).
12 The Spectacle and Its Others: Labor, Conflict, and Art in the Age of Global Capital (Angela Dimitrakaki).
13 Cultural Mercantilism: Modernism's Means of Production: The Gutai Group as Case Study (Ming Tiampo).
14 Audiovisionaries of the Network Planet (Sean Cubitt).
Part 4: Identifications.
Introduction.
15 Contemporary Asian Art and the West (David Clarke).
16 World Pictures: Globalization and Visual Culture (W. J. T. Mitchell).
17 Leaves of Grass and Real Allegory: A Case Study of International Rebellion (Albert Boime).
18 Collaboration in Art and Society: A Global Pursuit of Democratic Dialogue (Nikos Papastergiadis).
Part 5: Forms.
Introduction.
19 Globalization Questions and Contemporary Art's Answers: Art in Palestine (Khaled Hourani).
20 Political Islam and the Time of Contemporary Art (Amna Malik).
21 Displaced Models: Techniques and Tactics of Reproduction across the Genres and Institutions of Western Art from Duchamp to Doujak (*Lewis Johnson*0.
22 White Man Got No Dreaming: Indigenous Art, Apartheid and the Emergence of "Global Style" Painting in Australia (Jeanette Hoorn).
23 The Discourse of (L)imitation: A Case Study with Hole-Digging in 1960s Japan (Reiko Tomii).
Part 6: Reproduction.
Introduction.
24 Art and Postcolonial Society (Rasheed Araeen).
25 Why Art History is Global (James Elkins).
26 The Agency of the Historian in the Construction of National Identity in Colombian Architecture (Felipe Hernández).
27 Aboriginal Art and Australian Modernism: An Althusserian Critique (Darren Jorgensen).
28 Gesturing No(w)here (Nermin Saybasili).
Part 7: Organization.
Introduction.
29 The Emergence of Powerhouse Dealers in Contemporary Art (Derrick Chong).
30 The Art Market in Transition, the Global Economic Crisis, and the Rise of Asia (Iain Robertson).
31 Global Contemporary? The Global Horizon of Art Events (Charlotte Bydler).
32 "Institutionalized Globalization," Contemporary Art, and the Corporate Gulag in Chile (David Craven). 33 Culture, Neoliberal De...