Imagining the Present: Context, Content, and the Role of the Critic

by ;
Edition: 1st
Format: Nonspecific Binding
Pub. Date: 2006-03-30
Publisher(s): Routledge
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Summary

Lawrence Alloway ranks among the most important critics of his time, and his contributions to the spirited and contentious dialogue of his era make for fascinating reading. This collection of twenty-nine provocative essays from 1956 to 1980 provides readers with valuable perspectives on the art and visual culture of the second half of the 20th century. Lawrence Alloway was born in London in 1926 and died in New York in 1990, where he had taken up permanent residence in 1960 just prior to his appointment as Curator at the Guggenheim Museum. Critic, curator, editor, and teacher, Alloway wrote prescient pieces about the interactions of the fine arts with commercial art, science fiction, cybernetics, film, the mass media, and urban structures. An early member of the groundbreaking Independent Group in London, he coined the term "Pop Art," and his critical and curatorial advocacy was an important factor in that movement's early success. Throughout his career he maintained an inclusive, democratic view of art - one that encompassed popular culture, film, systemic abstract painting, realism, environmental art, women's art, the complex issues surrounding mechanical reproduction, the distribution of information and power in the art world, and the semiotics of cultural institutions. This text features a critical commentary by Richard Kalina, and a preface by series editor, Saul Ostrow.

Table of Contents

Preface
Commentary
Quick Symbols
Technology and Sex in Science Fiction: A Note on Cover Art
Design as a Human Activity
Personal Statement
The Arts and the Mass Media
The Long Front of Culture
City Notes
Artists as Consumers
Junk Culture
Pop Art since 1949
Six Painters and the Object
The American Sublime
The Critic and the Visual Arts
Art and the Communications Network
Systemic Painting
Art and the Expanding Audience
Pop Art: The Words
The Spectrum of Monochrome
Position Paper
Anthropology and Art Criticism
Systems of Cross-Reference in the Arts: On Translation
On Style
An Examination of Roy Lichtenstein's Development, Despite a New Monograph on the Artist
Photo-Realism
The Function of the Art Critic
Artists as Writers
Inside Information
Realism as a Problem
De Kooning: Criticism and Art History
The Complex Present
Problems of Iconography and Style
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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