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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $99.99

Format:
Paperback
464 pp.
204 Illustrations, 7" x 10"

ISBN-13:
9780190078331

Copyright Year:
2022

Imprint: OUP US


Themes of Contemporary Art

Visual Art After 1980, Fifth Edition

Jean Robertson, Craig McDaniel and Contributions by Scott Contreras-Koterbay

Themes of Contemporary Art: Visual Art after 1980, Fifth Edition, offers students and readers an introduction to recent art. The primary focus is an examination of themes that are widespread in contemporary artistic practice. Individual chapters analyze thematic content in eight groupings: Identity, The Body, Time, Memory, Place, Language, Science, and Spirituality. These eight thematic categories provide a significant sample from which readers can grasp influential concepts that stretch across much of the art of our time. Profiles of key artists and works enhance student understanding of these major themes and the individual approaches and key movements in the world of contemporary art.

Readership : This is an upper-level textbook for undergraduates taking contemporary art history courses.

Reviews

  • "Themes of Contemporary Art, Fifth Edition, is one of the best introductions to the thematic artistic concepts that continue to create the varied field we call 'contemporary art.' The chapters on identity, memory, and time are peerless in an introductory text such as this."
    --Jae Emerling, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
  • "This is the best textbook for contemporary art, because it is up to date, and is thematic. Its strong points include the summaries of dense post-structuralist and art theories; the artist profiles; and discussion of key works in a chapter. The book has been useful for students by providing a theoretical and historical context for contemporary works since 1980."
    --Lisa Lipinski, George Washington University

Contents

PREFACE


INTRODUCTION
Themes of Contemporary Art: What, Why, and How
A Brief Orientation

CHAPTER ONE
The World Changes, The Art World Expands
Overview of History and Art History: 1980-2020
Traditions Survive, New Trends Arrive
Globalization
Theory Flexes Its Muscles
Impact of the Digital*
Social Experience as Art
Art Meets Contemporary Culture
Artists Respond to the Anthropocene
PROFILE: Hito Steyerl*

CHAPTER TWO: Identity
A Focus on Identity in Art History
Identity Is Collective and Relational
Identity Politics
Otherness and Representation
Essentialism Versus Diversity
Authenticity and Hybridity
Identity Is Constructed
Deconstructing Difference
The Fluidity of Identity
Synthetic Identities
Fictional Identities

Are We Post-Identity?
PROFILE: Shirin Neshat
PROFILE: Ryan Trecartin and Lizzie Fitch

CHAPTER THREE: The Body
Past Figurative Art
Performing Bodies
The Body Beautiful
Grotesque Bodies
The Body Is a Battleground
Sexual Bodies
Gazing at Bodies
Mortal Bodies
Classifying Humans in the Genomic Age
Posthuman Bodies
PROFILE: Renée Cox
PROFILE: Zhang Huan

CHAPTER FOUR: Time
Changing Views of Time
Time and Art History
Time as a Medium
Live Art
Film and Video
Process Art

Exploring the Structure of Time
Counting and Measuring Time
Reordering Time

PROFILE: Hiroshi Sugimoto
PROFILE: Ragnar Kjartansson

CHAPTER FIVE: Memory
Memory and Art History
The Texture of Memory
Memory Is Emotional
Memory Is Unreliable
Memory Is Multisensory

Strategies for Representing the Past
Displaying Evidence
Reenacting the Past
Fracturing Narratives and Reshuffling Memories

Storehouses of Memory
Revisiting the Past
Recovering History
Rethinking History
Reframing the Present

Commemorating the Past
PROFILE: Christian Boltanski
PROFILE: Brian Tolle

CHAPTER SIX: Place
Places Have Meanings
Places Have Value
Looking Out for Places
Art History's Influence
Representations of Space
(Most) Works of Art Exist in a Place

What's Public? What's Private?
Dislocation
Fictionalized Places
PROFILE: Turbine Hall at Tate Modern
PROFILE: Andrea Zittel

CHAPTER SEVEN: Language
Art and Words: A Quick History
Recent Theories of Language
Reasons for Using Language
Language Makes Meaning
Language Takes Form
Transparency and Translucency
Spatiality and Physicality
Books Made by Artists
Wielding the Power of Language
Confronting the Challenge of Translation
Communication in the Digital Age*
Text and Power
Text as Digital Material

PROFILE: Nina Katchadourian
PROFILE: Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller

CHAPTER EIGHT: Science
What Is Science?
Artists as Amateur Scientists
Artists Adopt Scientific Tools and Materials
Creole Technologies
Bio Art

The Visual Culture of Science
Scientific Imaging and Art
Deconstructing the Visual Culture of Science
Scientific Displays and Archives
Science in Popular Culture
The Ideology of Science
Changing Paradigms of Science
Is Science Running Amok? Activist Art Responds
Is Nature Natural?

The Anthropocene: Climate Change and More
PROFILE: Patricia Piccinini
PROFILE: Eduardo Kac

CHAPTER NINE: Spirituality
Spirituality and Religion
Enchantment
A Short History
Religious Iconography
Spiritual Forms and Materials
Mingling the Sacred and the Profane
Sacred Spaces and Rituals
Finding Faith and Harboring Doubt
Facing Death, Doom, and Destruction
Art and Transcendence
PROFILE: Bill Viola
PROFILE: José Bedia

Selected Bibliography
Credits
Index

*Sections authored by Scott Contreras-Koterbay

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Jean Robertson is Chancellor's Professor Emerita of Art History at Indiana University, Herron School of Art and Design, IUPUI. Other books co-authored with Craig McDaniel include Spellbound: Rethinking the Alphabet (Intellect and University of Chicago Press, 2016); and Painting as a Language: Material, Technique, Form, Content (Harcourt, 2000). She is lead co-author with Deborah Hutton of The History of Art: A Global View (Thames & Hudson, 2022).

Craig McDaniel is Professor Emeritus of Fine Arts at Indiana University, Herron School of Art and Design, IUPUI. In addition to volumes co-authored with Jean Robertson, McDaniel has published essays on art and culture, most notably a series of articles that reevaluates the practice of painting and the achievements of key painters. In addition to participating in exhibitions of his own art, McDaniel has curated over 50 exhibitions of contemporary art by others.

Scott Contreras-Koterbay (guest author) is Professor in the Department of Art & Design, adjunct professor in the Department of Philosophy & Humanities, and Director of the Bert C. Bach Fine & Performing Scholars in the Honors College at East Tennessee State University. He is co-author with Lukasz Mirocha of The New Aesthetic and Art: Constellations of the Postdigital (Instituut voor Netweerkcultuur, 2016).

Making Sense - Margot Northey
Why Is That Art? - Terry Barrett

Special Features

  • Thematic organization allows students to make connections between a wide ranging selection of artists, styles, and media, offering a rich visual program complementing a detailed text.
  • Diverse and global coverage is highly relevant and reflects today's global art world.
  • Discussions of both history and process appeal to both studio art and history history majors.