Edition |
1st ed. |
Description |
1 online resource (x, 372 pages) : illustrations (some color). |
Series |
Revisiting New England. |
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Revisiting New England.
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Note |
Print version record. |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 331-353) and index. |
Summary |
Annotation In Boston Modern, Judith Bookbinder firmly establishes Boston figurative expressionism as an integral part of American modernism, one that presents an alternative approach to the trajectory of abstract art in the turbulent decades bracketing the Second World War. The works of the movement's most remarkable artists boldly confront issues of personal and group identity in the modern world, consider the role of the artist as witness to violence, prejudice, and corruption in modern society, and intricately reinterpret the nature of the creative process and its formal and spatial implications. Within Boston's unique and surprisingly receptive Anglo-Saxon and academic tradition, Karl Zerbe, Hyman Bloom, Jack Levine, David Aronson, Philip Guston, and others, many of whom were Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe or their children, struggled to clarify their identities as outsiders in an insider's world and as modern artists. Although at first critically and popularly well received throughout the country, Boston figurative expressionists were increasingly marginalized by the development of abstract modernism centered in New York.<br /><br />However, by giving voice to the ethos of a community in flux, the movement continues to inspire artists today. The vibrant dialogue the group established between their individual perspectives and the aesthetic conventions taught at Boston's academic institutions is here at last given the prominent treatment it deserves. Lavishly illustrated and skillfully presented, Boston Modern definitively challenges widely accepted notions of modernist discourse in American art history. |
Contents |
"The new heroism" : Karl Zerbe's beginnings, the German avant-garde, and 'Entartete Kunst' in Boston -- Immigrant childhoods : the education of Hyman Bloom and Jack Levine -- Society as a morality play : Jack Levine's view of the world -- Mystery and materiality : Hyman Bloom's spiritual renderings -- Teaching by example : Karl Zerbe's painting and pedagogy -- Challenging established assumptions : David Aronson, other museum school students, and the debate at the Institute of Contemporary Art -- Reestablishing roots : Aronson, Guston, and a renewed figurative expressionist debate -- Conclusion : figurative expressionism beyond Boston. |
Local Note |
EBSCOhost Art and Architecture Complete |
Subject |
Figurative expressionism -- Massachusetts -- Boston.
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Art, American -- Massachusetts -- Boston -- 20th century.
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Expressionism (Art) -- Germany -- Influence.
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Art, American. (OCoLC)fst00815895
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Expressionism (Art) -- Influence.
(OCoLC)fst00918897
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Figurative expressionism. (OCoLC)fst00924055
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Germany. (OCoLC)fst01210272
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Massachusetts -- Boston.
(OCoLC)fst01205012
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Visual Arts.
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Art, Architecture & Applied Arts.
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Visual Arts -- General.
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Chronological Term |
1900-1999
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Other Form: |
Print version: Bookbinder, Judith Arlene. Boston modern. 1st ed. Durham, N.H. : University of New Hampshire Press ; Hanover : University Press of New England, ©2005 1584654880 (DLC) 2005003206 (OCoLC)57652272 |
ISBN |
1584654880 (cloth (alkaline paper) |
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9781584654889 (cloth (alkaline paper) |
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