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British art in the cultural field, 1939-69 / edited by Lisa Tickner, David Peters Corbett.

Contributor(s): Series: Art history special issuesPublication details: Hoboken, N.J. : Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.Description: 277 p. : ill. ; 28 cmISBN:
  • 9781118275849
  • 1118275845
Subject(s):
Contents:
Chapter 1. Being British and Going ... Somewhere -- Chapter 2. 'The morrow we left behind': Landscape and the Rethinking of Modernism, 1939-53 -- Chapter 3. Sculpture for the Hand: Herbert Read in the Studio of Kurt Schwitters -- Chapter 4. Science, Art and Landscape in the Nuclear Age -- Chapter 5. Photography into Building in Post-war Architecture: The Smithsons and James Stirling -- Chapter 6. Realism, Brutalism, Pop (Alex Potts) -- Chapter 7. The Independent Group's 'Anthropology of Ourselves' -- Chapter 8. Dada's Mama: Richard Hamilton's Queer Pop -- Chapter 9. Francis Bacon: Painting after Photography -- Chapter 10. Vulgar Pictures: Bacon, de Kooning, and the Figure under Abstraction -- Chapter 11.'Export Britain': Pop Art, Mass Culture and the Export Drive -- Chapter 12. Painting and Sculpture of a Decade '54-'64 Revisited -- Chapter 13. Varieties of Belatedness and Provincialism: Decolonization and British Pop (Leon Wainwright) -- Index.
Summary: Informed by new research, this rich collection of thought-provoking essays presents a fresh assessment of British Art in the Cultural Field, 1939-69, locating influential artists, movements, institutions, and individual works against the changing economic and cultural landscape to shed new light on this seminal period in British art history. International art historians explore many different aspects of the period which saw post-war austerity, decolonisation, and the birth of postmodernism Takes a variety of approaches, from the broad canvas of the political economy of art to closely attentive readings of individual artists and works, from Bacon to Stirling, and the Independent Group to Pop Art Invaluable for students and scholars of the field, as well as general readers, including the growing number of collectors of twentieth-century British art.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book CGLAS Library Yellow 709.410904 TIC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 02628

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Chapter 1. Being British and Going ... Somewhere -- Chapter 2. 'The morrow we left behind': Landscape and the Rethinking of Modernism, 1939-53 -- Chapter 3. Sculpture for the Hand: Herbert Read in the Studio of Kurt Schwitters -- Chapter 4. Science, Art and Landscape in the Nuclear Age -- Chapter 5. Photography into Building in Post-war Architecture: The Smithsons and James Stirling -- Chapter 6. Realism, Brutalism, Pop (Alex Potts) -- Chapter 7. The Independent Group's 'Anthropology of Ourselves' -- Chapter 8. Dada's Mama: Richard Hamilton's Queer Pop -- Chapter 9. Francis Bacon: Painting after Photography -- Chapter 10. Vulgar Pictures: Bacon, de Kooning, and the Figure under Abstraction -- Chapter 11.'Export Britain': Pop Art, Mass Culture and the Export Drive -- Chapter 12. Painting and Sculpture of a Decade '54-'64 Revisited -- Chapter 13. Varieties of Belatedness and Provincialism: Decolonization and British Pop (Leon Wainwright) -- Index.

Informed by new research, this rich collection of thought-provoking essays presents a fresh assessment of British Art in the Cultural Field, 1939-69, locating influential artists, movements, institutions, and individual works against the changing economic and cultural landscape to shed new light on this seminal period in British art history. International art historians explore many different aspects of the period which saw post-war austerity, decolonisation, and the birth of postmodernism Takes a variety of approaches, from the broad canvas of the political economy of art to closely attentive readings of individual artists and works, from Bacon to Stirling, and the Independent Group to Pop Art Invaluable for students and scholars of the field, as well as general readers, including the growing number of collectors of twentieth-century British art.