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Since '45: America and the Making of Contemporary Art

Contributor(s): Siegel, Katy (Author)

ISBN: 9781861897732

Publisher: Reaktion Books

Hardcover
$29.00
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Pub Date: March 15, 2011

Dewey: 709

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Illustrated, Index, Price on Product, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 8.50" L x 5.50" W ( 1.25 lbs) 254 pages

BISAC Categories:

Art | American | History | 20th and 21st Century

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Since '45 details the collision of American history and modern art. Since World War II, New York has been the indisputable center of the art world, and as Katy Siegel shows, it has had a profound influence on the preoccupations that contemporary art would come to have. Tracing art history over the past decades, she shows how anxieties over race, mass culture, the individual, suburbia, apocalypse, and nuclear destruction have supplanted the legacy of European artistic traditions.

Siegel's study encompasses a variety of works, including Rothko's planes of color, Warhol's serial silkscreens, Richard Prince's cowboys, Robert Longo's Men in Cities, Faith Ringgold's Black Light, and Laurie Simmons's dollhouses, and moves fluidly from discussions of artists' works, art museums, and galleries to cultural influences and significant historical events. Rather than arguing on nationalist grounds or viewing American culture as representative of a now-devalued nation, Siegel explores how American culture dominated not only American artists but created conditions that now, after the full globalization of the art world, affect artists around the world. Since '45 will interest all readers engaged in post-war and contemporary art in the United States and beyond.

Brief description: Katy Siegel is the Eugene V. and Clare E. Thaw Endowed Chair in Modern American Art at Stony Brook University and contributing editor at Artforum. She is the author of "The Heroine Paint" and coauthor of Art Works.

Review Quotes: "Siegel is a daring and imaginative critic, able to tease out subterranean links among the most disparate bodies of work and follow them across the decades." -- "Bookslut"

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