Art in Its Time: Theories and Practices of Modern AestheticsPsychology Press, 2003 - 185 sayfa Art In Its Time takes a close look at the way in which art has become integral to the everyday 'ordinary' life of modern society. It explores the prevalent notion of art as transcending its historical moment, and argues that art cannot be separated from the everyday as it often provides material to represent social struggles and class, to explore sexuality, and to think about modern industry and our economic relationships. |
İçindekiler
Introduction | 1 |
Some masks of modernism | 9 |
Art and money | 24 |
Beautiful and sublime | 46 |
The rationalization of art | 74 |
Mechanical reproduction in the age of art | 87 |
Pork and porcelain | 106 |
The aesthetics of antiaesthetics | 119 |
The Andy Warhol of philosophy and the philosophy of Andy Warhol | 134 |
The avantgarde in fashion | 152 |
Classless taste | 174 |
183 | |
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Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
abstract abstract art Abstract Expressionism aesthetic American Andy Warhol art history art's artists artworks aura autonomy avant-garde Avant-garde and kitsch Baudelaire Beaton's beauty Benjamin Bourdieu bourgeois Brillo Boxes Buchloh Burke capitalist character Charles Baudelaire claim classical Clement Greenberg commercial conception of art contemporary contrast Corbusier critical critique Crone Crow Cubism culture Danto Diderot discourse distinction dominant earlier economic eighteenth eighteenth-century elements embodied essay experience expression figures function Gallery gender Ibid idea idem ideology institutions Jackson Pollock Kant kitsch Le Corbusier London luxury Marcel Duchamp means Meyer Schapiro mode Modern Art modernist Mondrian Museum of Modern nation nature nineteenth century object original painters painting Paris Paul Mattick philosophical photographs Picasso picture Pierre Bourdieu poetry political Pollock's Pop Art practice production relation role sculpture sense sexual significance social society sublime taste theory things tion tradition visual arts woman women writing York