1
1
Art of the United States, 1750-2000 : primary sources / John Davis, Michael Leja ; edited by Francesca Rose ; with contributions by Lacey Baradel.
Title & Author:

Art of the United States, 1750-2000 : primary sources / John Davis, Michael Leja ; edited by Francesca Rose ; with contributions by Lacey Baradel.

Publication:

Chicago, Illinois : Terra Foundation for American Art, [2020]
©2020

Description:

543 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 23 cm

Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Chapter one. Building patronage and institutions, 1750-1830. Benjamin West: a new world genius conquers the old -- John Singleton Copley: ambition and practicality -- John Adams on the arts -- Charles Wilson Peale's museum -- John Trumbull paints Revolutionary history -- A plan for governing patronage of history painting -- The National Academy of Design: the founding -- William Dunlap champions the arts -- Thomas Cole and a patron -- For the birds: John James Audubon and American nature -- Chapter two. Landscape, democracy, race, 1830-1850. Horatio Greenough's George Washington -- Thomas Cole and the American landscape -- -- Responses to daguerreotype -- George Catlin portrays the Native Americas -- The Public display of slavery -- Frederick Douglass on African American portraiture -- Washington Allston in Boston -- Hiram Power's The Greek Slave -- The American Art-Union -- Düsseldorf and the Düsseldoerf Gallery --
Chapter three. The Civil War and its aftermath, 1850-1870. Lily Martin Spencer: making it in New York -- Asher B. Durand formulates the American landscape -- The lure of Italy -- Harriet Hosmer in the Eternal City -- Frederic Church's Heart of the Andes -- Eastman Johnson's Negro Life at the South -- The photograph and the face -- Photographs of Antietam -- John Quincey Adams Ward's Freedman -- Albert Bierstadt's great picture -- The Nation versus Prang & Co. -- Sculpture in midcentry America -- Chapter four. The Gilded Age, 1870-1885. Thomas Moran and the Western Sublime -- J. Alden Weir writes home about Jean-Léon Gérôme -- Henry James reviews some American painters -- Thomas Eakins in Spain -- Thomas Eakins's The Gross Clinic -- Eakins and the School of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts -- Young Turks: the formation of the Society of American Artists -- The Munich School -- Otto Bacher on Whistler in Venice -- Mariana Griswold van Rensselaer assesses the progress of American art -- Winslow Homer's sea change -- Friedrich Pecht: a German critic on American art -- Sylvester Koehler reflects on a decade of American art --
Chapter five. A new internationalism, 1885-1900. William Harnett's The Old Violin -- Kenyon Cox's lonely campaign for the nude -- James McNeill Whistler's platform -- William Merritt Chase, seeing machine -- Albert Pinkham Ryder: the myth of the Romantic Primitive -- Childe Hassam on painting street scenes -- Marry Cassatt, modern woman -- Experiencing the World's Columbian Exposition -- Should women artists marry? -- Cecilia Beaux: becoming the greatest woman painter -- Booker T. Washington on Henry Ossawa Tanner -- Alfred Stieglitz on Pictoralism -- Chapter six. Progressivism and modernism, 1900-1918. John Sloan on the life of an artist in New York -- Lewis Hine: social justice through photography -- The Making of a photograph by Alfred Stieglitz -- Robert Henri advocates individuality and freedom in art education -- Alfred Stieglitz and John Marin introducing Modernism at the Armory Show -- Kenyon Cox: the case against Modernism -- Theodore Roosevelt offers a layman's view of Modern Art -- Explanatory notes from the Modernists -- Marcel Duchamp surveys New York -- Duchamp, with the help of Louise Norton and Beatrice Wood, defends his infamous Readymade --
Chapter seven. Prosperity and Depression, 1918-1939. Georgia O'Keeffe paints as she wants to -- Joseph Stella on the divine and the demonic in the modern city -- Edward Hopper finds kindred spirits in John Sloan and Charles Burchfield -- George Schuyler and Langston Hughes propose different paths for African American culture -- Romare Bearden and Aaron Douglas: the situation of African American artists -- Putting artists to work during the Depression -- Dorothea Lange on documentary photography -- Thomas Hart Benton and the US scene -- Swinging abstraction: Stuart Davis -- A voice of radical cultural politics in the 1930s -- Meyer Schapiro's critical analysis of Modern Art -- Norman Bel Geddes streamlines design -- Life Magazine and the demand for pictures -- Chapter eight. War and Cold War, anxiety and affluence, 1939-1960. Norman Rockwell brings the four freedoms to life -- Jackson Pollock remakes Abstraction -- Mark Rothko: agitation and calm -- Barnett Newman declares space -- Clement Greenberg identifies an American Avant-Garde -- Harold Rosenberg defines Action Painting -- Confrontation pieces by Louise Bourgeois -- Berenice Abbott: documentary photography in a world of pictures -- Oscar Howe on creative freedom and Native American traditions -- Walker Evans & Robert Frank on Frank's Americans -- Robert Rauschenberg's disparate visual facts -- John Cage on Robert Rauschenberg's Combines -- Jasper Johns seeing and knowing -- US painting and the Cold War --
Chapter nine. Political polarization, counterculture and reaction, 1960-1980. Allan Kaprow and happenings -- Claes Oldenburg: an art of bending, kicking, and breaking -- Roy Lichtenstein: capitalism, industrialism, and Pop Art -- Andy Warhol on Pop Art and homosexuality -- Carolee Schneemann and Aphroditean performance -- Frank Stella and Donald Judd: unbroken wholeness -- Robert Morris: physical evidence of the visual field -- Michael Fried's objections to Minimalism -- A manifesto for Conceptual Art: Sol LeWitt's paragraphs -- Artists organize to demand rights and reforms -- Emory Douglas, The Black Panther Party, and Revolutionary art -- AfriCOBRA pursues the cultural liberation of Black America -- Robert Smithson reshapes land -- Judy Chicago's feminist imagery -- The Art of Light and Space in Los Angeles -- Adrian Piper's philosophical and engaged Conceptual Art -- Analyzing pictures culture through art -- Chapter ten. Culture wars and postmodernism, 1980-2000. Martha Rosler: social documentary photography versus appropriation -- Cindy Sherman, pictures and identities -- Maya Lin's memorials -- Hans Haacke and the critique of arts institutions -- Jean-Michel Basquiat's raw and subtle graffiti -- David Hammons: defiant Street Art -- Robert Mapplethorpe's embattled photographs -- Inciting action through art to end the AIDS epidemic -- Coco Fusco performing Otherness -- Fred Wilson exhibits suppressed histories -- Kara Walker: surreal, silhouetted panoramas of slavery -- Chronology 1500-2000.
Summary:

This volume presents three centuries of US art through a broad array of historical texts, including writings by artists, critics, patrons, literary figures, and other commentators. Combining a wide-ranging selection of texts with high-quality reproductions of artworks, it offers a unique resource for the study and understanding of the visual arts of the United States. With contextual essays, explanatory headnotes, a chronology of historical landmarks, maps, and full-color illustrations of key artworks, the volume will appeal to national and international audiences ranging from undergraduates and museum visitors to art historians and other scholars. Texts by a range of artists and cultural figures-from Benjamin West to Kara Walker-are grouped according to historical era alongside works by many of the artists featured. This sourcebook brings together multiple voices throughout the ages to provide a framework for learning and critical thinking on US art. --From publisher description.

ISBN:

9780932171207 paperback
0932171206 paperback
9780932171689 paperback
0932171680 paperback

Subject:

Art, American Sources.
Art, American Pictorial works.
Art, American.
Art United States History.
Art américain Sources.
Art américain Ouvrages illustrés.
Art américain.
Art États-Unis Histoire.
ART / American / General.
Art
Kunst
United States
USA

Form/genre:

Pictorial works
History

Added entries:

Davis, John, 1961 September 24- writer of added commentary.
Leja, Michael, 1951- writer of added commentary.
Rose, Francesca, editor.
Baradel, Lacey, 1982- contributor.
Glassman, Elizabeth, writer of foreword.

Holdings:

Location: Library main 318683
Call No.: 318683
Copy: 1
Status: Available

Actions:
1
1

Sign up to get news from us

Email address
First name
Last name
By signing up you agree to receive our newsletter and communications about CCA activities. You can unsubscribe at any time. For more information, consult our privacy policy or contact us.

Thank you for signing up. You'll begin to receive emails from us shortly.

We’re not able to update your preferences at the moment. Please try again later.

You’ve already subscribed with this email address. If you’d like to subscribe with another, please try again.

This email was permanently deleted from our database. If you’d like to resubscribe with this email, please contact us

Please complete the form below to buy:
[Title of the book, authors]
ISBN: [ISBN of the book]
Price [Price of book]

First name
Last name
Address (line 1)
Address (line 2) (optional)
Postal code
City
Country
Province/state
Email address
Phone (day) (optional)
Notes

Thank you for placing an order. We will contact you shortly.

We’re not able to process your request at the moment. Please try again later.

Folder ()

Your folder is empty.

Email:
Subject:
Notes:
Please complete this form to make a request for consultation. A copy of this list will also be forwarded to you.

Your contact information
First name:
Last name:
Email:
Phone number:
Notes (optional):
We will contact you to set up an appointment. Please keep in mind that your consultation date will be based on the type of material you wish to study. To prepare your visit, we'll need:
  • — At least 2 weeks for primary sources (prints and drawings, photographs, archival documents, etc.)
  • — At least 48 hours for secondary sources (books, periodicals, vertical files, etc.)
...