AngloModern

Painting and Modernity in Britain and the United States

Janet Wolff author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cornell University Press

Published:4th Mar '03

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

AngloModern cover

Early twentieth-century art and art practice in Britain and the United States were, Janet Wolff asserts, marginalized by critics and historians in very similar ways after the rise of post-Cubist modern art. In a masterly book on the sociology of modernism, Wolff explores work that was primarily realist and figurative and investigates the social, institutional, political, and aesthetic processes by which that art fell by the wayside in the postwar period. Throughout, she shows that questions of gender and ethnicity play an important role in critical, curatorial, and historical evaluations. For example, Wolff finds that the work of the artists central to the development of the Whitney Museum was relegated to a secondary status in the postwar period, when realism was labeled "feminine" in contrast to the aggressive masculinity of abstract expressionism.

The three key periods considered in AngloModern are the early twentieth century, when modernist art and existing and new realist traditions coexisted in a certain tension; the postwar period, in which modernism claimed superiority over realism; and the late twentieth century, when a retrieval of the realist and figurative traditions seemed to occur. Wolff concludes by considering this re-emergence, as well as the limitations of earlier discussions of the struggles of realist and figurative art to endure the currents of modernism.

Janet Wolff's lucid book, like many a post-modern cultural critique, aims to deconstruct rigid hegemonies or as the author puts it, 'narratives of fixity.'... AngloModern effectively exposes some problematic aspects of the prevailing modernist discoures.

* Times Literary Suppleme

ISBN: 9780801439230

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm

Weight: 454g

192 pages