Books.Arthur C. Danto Though photography was first believed to entail the death of painting, early photographs presented viewers with a dead world: Objects could be rendered with clarity only under the conditions of nature morte. Unlike paintings, which were able to depict the fact that, say, horses were in motion, the camera could capture animals only when immobile. Eadweard Muybridge's achievement in 1872--thirty-three years after photography's invention--was to bring the new medium abreast of painting by depicting the fact that a live horse was in motion. Muybridge had taken an important step in the development of moving pictures. As late as 1881, his images look like photographs of cut-paper silhouettes. Only knowledge of how those images were made enables us to appreciate the depth of Muybridge's achievement--that they are of actual horses in real motion, though the unaided eye would never be able to see horses move that way. The camera has captured something beyond the range of unaided vision. Rebecca Solnit's brilliant River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West (Viking) narrates all this and more: the evolution of photography in panorama and kinoscopy; how the Wild West was made possible only through the technological conquest of speed. Interwoven in·ter·weave v. in·ter·wove , in·ter·wo·ven , inter·weav·ing, inter·weaves v.tr. 1. To weave together. 2. To blend together; intermix. v.intr. with this, she tells the story of Muybridge himself as inventor, artist, showman, murderer, and genius. Greil Marcus Don DeLillo's compact Cosmopolis cos·mop·o·lis n. A large city inhabited by people from many different countries. [cosmo- + Greek polis, city; see pel (Scribner) was greeted mostly with contempt. A day in the life of a twenty-eight-year-old multibllionaire trader, setting off in his white limousine to get a haircut--or get his head cut off--its April 2000 setting was a reminder of, it seemed, an illusion of milk and honey it was time to get over. "Government by grown-ups," as George Will said again and again of the new Bush administration in 2001. Hadn't DeLillo heard the news? The Clinton years never happened. They happen again here--as, DeLillo knows, America dissolving itself in an orgy of speculation has happened before and will happen again. The book is written in stilted, philosophical sound-bite dialogue that after a time works as a kind of code for people too busy to explain what they mean, or too afraid to; Cosmopolis is far more about New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. as the nation's capital--in both senses of the word--than a single person, and so the city, and thus the nation, speaks with the same accent. DeLillo dares the reader to pretend he or she speaks any differently. "A specter is haunting the world," shout globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation protesters outside the limousine. "You know what capitalism produces. According to Marx and Engels," says one woman inside the limo. "Its own grave-diggers," says the trader. "But these are not the grave-diggers. This is the free market itself. These people are a fantasy generated by the market." You can pretend this less true today than it was during those unreal times before the Bubble burst, or you can listen to DeLillo hunt down the language the times still speak, listen to him try to break the code. Katy Siegel Let's get specific: The best page in a book this year is page II in Los Alamos by William Eggleston (Scalo), a picture of a teenage boy pushing grocery carts in a parking lot, and the photographer's first color image. These pictures, made between 1966 and 1974, show Eggleston not just as one of the best riving photographers but as a great abstract artist, seamlessly joining uneasy social content and formal perfection. Despite the book's title, these photos were shot in many different places, from Memphis to Los Angeles; Eggleston named the project after a 1973 visit to Los Alamos. If you've ever been to the tiny New Mexico town, you know it's a weird place, very bright yet very dark, something he hints at with the book's frontispiece: a piercing blue sky with a giant, fluffy white puff. Happy days or mushroom cloud? The book wanders through an emphatically postwar America in all its bitter, beautiful glory, from handpainted ads to neon signs, from watermelon-eating black caricature to the integrated drinking fountains of the New South. Photography from the '70s seems to demand reevaluation in Gursky's backward glow--both Robert Adams and Stephen Shore looked great in Tate Modern's big roundup "Cruel and Tender"--but no one can match Eggleston's sense of the layered quality of modernity, all hot color and peeling surfaces. And Memphis still looks like this today. Rosalind E. Krauss Rosalind Krauss (Born Rosalind Epstein on November 30 1941) is an American art critic, professor, and theorist who is based at Columbia University. Menzel's Realism: Art and Emhodiment in Nineteenth-Century Berlin (Yale University Press), published late last year, is Michael Fried's third campaign, after Realism, Writing, Disfiguration dis·fig·ure tr.v. dis·fig·ured, dis·fig·ur·ing, dis·fig·ures To mar or spoil the appearance or shape of; deform. [Middle English disfiguren, from Old French desfigurer : On Thomas Eakins and Stephen Crane (1987) and Courbet's Realism (1990), in a two-decade-long battle with the aesthetic problem of realism. The terms in which a seeming transparency to the world's visual array might be understood as wrought, and thus as art, have been the prey Fried has hunted throughout these three books. The issue of Menzel has been made even thornier by the thought-experiment with which T.J. Clark begins Farewell to an Idea (r999), where he wonders how a group of works, including Menzel's study Moltke's Binoculars, 1871, unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. after a cataclysm that would utterly separate us from an intuitive connection to past forms of life, could possibly be understood. Fried's concept of embodiment, which he tracks through long but hair-raising bouts of close and sustained looking, turns on the viewer's bodily projection into and identification with the postures of represented figures and, more important, the disjunctive dis·junc·tive adj. 1. Serving to separate or divide. 2. Grammar Serving to establish a relationship of contrast or opposition. The conjunction but in the phrase poor but comfortable is disjunctive. differences in the attitude, attention, and posture of the artist standing before the array as he variously focused on its separate aspects. To buttress this, Fried introduces the theorization the·o·rize v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es v.intr. To formulate theories or a theory; speculate. v.tr. To propose a theory about. of empathy so important to the late-nineteenth-century understanding of aesthetic interest. Further, he reads such projection as themarized by Menzel's own works, in which transference or exchange between the animate and the inanimate drew the artist to the depiction of traces left by the human occupant or user of the accoutrements ac·cou·ter·ment or ac·cou·tre·ment n. 1. An accessory item of equipment or dress. Often used in the plural. 2. Military equipment other than uniforms and weapons. Often used in the plural. 3. of daily experience. Considering a group of works devoted to suits of armor, in which the metal sheaths have taken on the animation of the body for which they were fashioned, Fried describes them as "empty yet instinct with rife." The exactitude of the word "instinct" here is characteristic of Fried's diction, its precision and range. Traces, condemned by Walter Benjamin as "the phantasmagorias of the interior, which are constituted by man's imperious need to leave the imprint of his private individual existence on the rooms he inhabits," bring Fried back into dialogue with Clark's "great book," a case of critical and scholarly exchange exemplary in its seriousness and courtesy. Mark Dion The US Fish and Wildlife Service estimates that the total US birder population is forty-six million. The variety of bird-watchers almost rivals the diversity of their quarry. There are intellectual-philosophical types, competition-driven sportsmen, nerdy list makers, fanatical pilgrims, and gadget-laden technophiles, to name only a few. (Classify me a lazy bird-watcher of the 9:30 AM variety.) Despite these divergent temperaments, birders now have a literary benchmark to unite them: the Sibley Bird Guides (Knopf). This year The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Eastern North America and The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Western North America were published, joining the volumes by David Allen Sibley David Allen Sibley (born 1962, New York) is an American ornithologist. He is the author and illustrator of The Sibley Guide to Birds, considered by many to be the most comprehensive guide for North American field identification. already in print. The Sibley series, which took a dozen years to write and illustrate, is impressive. The illustrations are superb, precise yet animated. The texts, rather than seeming exhaustive, act as teasers, goading readers to further their knowledge by direct observation and scholarship. The variety and variability of avian life has never been more supremely presented for nonspecialists. The American tradition of ornithological or·ni·thol·o·gy n. The branch of zoology that deals with the study of birds. or ni·tho·log artists bridges two
moments: the recording of birds as they were "discovered" and
added to the annals of natural history and the later documentation of
the decline of bird species. In ornithology ornithologyBranch of zoology dealing with the study of birds. Early writings on birds were largely anecdotal (including folklore) or practical (e.g., treatises on falconry and game-bird management). , as in mineralogy mineralogy Scientific study of minerals, including their physical properties, chemical composition, internal crystal structure, occurrence and distribution in nature, and origins or conditions of formation. , what is rare is precious. Bird-watchers are in the position to document the loss of species: the process of the world becoming a place less wonderful, less rich. The Sibley series is perhaps an elegant elegy elegy, in Greek and Roman poetry, a poem written in elegiac verse (i.e., couplets consisting of a hexameter line followed by a pentameter line). The form dates back to 7th cent. B.C. in Greece and poets such as Archilochus, Mimnermus, and Tytraeus. . Carlos Basualdo For those who thought all was calm and gentle in the field of Renaissance studies, a careful reading of Titian Titian (tĭsh`ən), c.1490–1576, Venetian painter, whose name was Tiziano Vecellio, b. Pieve di Cadore in the Dolomites. Of the very first rank among the artists of the Renaissance, Titian had an immense influence on succeeding generations (Yale University Press), the catalogue accompanying the recent retrospective originating at the National Gallery in London, might bring some delightful surprise. For some time the completeness of a number of Titian's astonishing a·ston·ish tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise. later works, considered by many to be the artist's crowning jewels, has been a matter of debate. Works like Annunciation Annunciation dove and lily pictured with Virgin and Gabriel. [Christian Iconography: Brewer Dictionary, 645] Elizabeth Mary’s old cousin; bears John the Baptist. [N.T. , ca. 1560-66, The Martyrdom of Saint Lawrence, 1567, and the extraordinary Flaying For other uses, see . Flaying is the removal of skin from the body. Generally, an attempt is made to maintain the removed portion of skin intact. Scope An animal may be flayed in preparation for human consumption, or for its hide or fur; this is more commonly called of Marsyas, ca. 1570-76, have become even more greatly appreciated today for offering early examples of an expressivity expressivity /ex·pres·siv·i·ty/ (eks?pres-siv´i-te) in genetics, the extent to which an inherited trait is manifested by an individual. that only fully emerged in painting centuries later. While David Jaffe, the organizer of the show, stresses the relevance of this later work in the catalogue, Warburg Institute director Charles Hope advances in his essay doubts-most notably with regard to The Death of Actaeon, ca. 1565-76, and The Crowning with Thorns, 1572-76--openly contradicting the curator's view. Beyond the scholarly debate, which concerns Titian's patrons, the painter himself, and the notion of artistic genius, what's at stake is not only the question of whether a Renaissance artist could embrace such an extreme painterly style at a very advanced age but, more important, whether one could enact such a radical break with his or her own time. Martha Rosler "We have become terminally self-conscious," William Gibson wrote in the New York Times Magazine in 1996, extolling Net surfing as a way to flee the imagination from the paranoia of watching ourselves watching television, the labor of our postindustrial post·in·dus·tri·al adj. Of or relating to a period in the development of an economy or nation in which the relative importance of manufacturing lessens and that of services, information, and research grows. Adj. 1. , postgeographic age. In Pattern Recognition (Putnam), snippets of footage circulating on the Net have created an international web of interpreters and enthusiasts, among them the book's protagonist, Cayce Pollard. A savant sa·vant n. 1. A learned person; a scholar. 2. An idiot savant. [French, learned, savant, from Old French, present participle of savoir, to know of sorts, Cayce is so sensitive to the constructs of corporate branding that she is employed to experience brand paraphernalia in corporate boardrooms but is otherwise so flat as to be dreamless. The sign-besotted world of this alternate present--much like our own--makes a submerged weapon of the Kantian faculty of taste, and Cayce suffers perpetual existential nausea from its visual torpedoes. Like Gibson's writing style, she shuttles between a microscopically detailed scrutiny of her environment in the mirror world--what we are used to calling "the real world"--and a cocooning co·coon·ing n. Retreat into the seclusion of one's own home during leisure time, as for privacy or escape: "The harassments of daily life away from it. Negotiating between vertigo and paranoia, between purity and danger, Cayce tries to figure out her mysterious employer, Hubertus Bigend of Blue Ant, a female pursuer--not to mention the post-Soviet underworld--and, centrally, the footage. And one more thing: Why was her father, a CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). man, in New York on September H, 2001--where she was watching the attacks on TV--and why was he an apparent victim that day? This is the backstory back·sto·ry n. 1. The experiences of a character or the circumstances of an event that occur before the action or narrative of a literary, cinematic, or dramatic work: to the largely Western cultural Imaginary, a solipsistic forest of signs and subversions. Ronald Jones Years ago, walking me across the quad at Sewanee, the writer Peter Taylor let it be known that Robert Lowell acquired southern gentility and a lilt from contact with Robert Penn Warren Noun 1. Robert Penn Warren - United States writer and poet (1905-1989) Warren and the Southern Review. Even when Lowell was wrestling with madness or besotted be·sot tr.v. be·sot·ted, be·sot·ting, be·sots To muddle or stupefy, as with alcoholic liquor or infatuation. [be- + sot, to stupefy (from sot, fool with passion, politesse streamed through his poetry, lifted beneath the long vowels Taylor heard echoing Dixie. He employed his elegant, poignant voice, his juicy intellect, a personal dignity, and peerless formal mastery to confess his life in art. Here is a taste: No weekends for the gods now. Wars flicker, earth licks its open sores, fresh breakage, fresh promotions, chance assassinations, no advance. Only man thinning out his kind sounds through the Sabbath noon, the blind swipe of the pruner and his knife busy about the tree of life ... Lowell wrote this stanza, from "Waking Early Sunday Morning," during the 1967 bombing offensive in Vietnam and two years after he refused LBJ's invitation to a White House Festival of the Arts
The Festival of the Arts, or simply Festival is a three day arts festival in Grand Rapids held on the first Friday, Saturday, and Sunday of June. . I happened on the poem, in his Collected Poems (Farrar, Straus & Giroux Farrar, Straus & Giroux Publishing company in New York City noted for its literary excellence. It was founded in 1945 by John Farrar and Roger Straus as Farrar, Straus & Co. ), the day the number of Americans who had perished in Iraq after President Bush declared the war to be over exceeded those killed during the brief campaign. "Out of the blue" may not account for putting a book of collected poems on a year-end list of notables. Even so, the weight of poetry, perhaps the most solitary of all the solitary arts, makes gains in a culture as extroverted ex·tro·vert·ed also ex·tra·vert·ed adj. Marked by interest in and behavior directed toward others or the environment as opposed to or to the exclusion of self; gregarious or outgoing: as our own. Carol Armstrong David Batchelor's Chromophobia (Reaktion), though not one of this year's books according to its publication date, is this year's book for me. For I am a chromophile, and "chromophobia," as defined by Batchelor, turns out to be the Janus face of chromophilia. In the history of Western art, the fear of color has been especially intertwined with the yearning after it, as if it were the aesthetic imagination's Other. Orientalist, feminine, cosmetic, superficial, hallucinogenic hal·lu·ci·no·gen n. A substance that induces hallucination. [hallucin(ation) + -gen.] hal·lu , poisonous, apocalyptic; mystical and infinite yet basely material and fraught with dime-store vulgarity; sensational rather than ideational i·de·ate v. i·de·at·ed, i·de·at·ing, i·de·ates v.tr. To form an idea of; imagine or conceive: "Such characters represent a grotesquely blown-up aspect of an ideal man . . . , supplementary rather than of the essence, color is that which deceives rather than helps one gain knowledge of the world. From Plato to the white walls of modernism it has been reviled and attached to all things disparaged, while also constituting an object of desire. Color, so Roger de Piles Roger de Piles (October 7, 1635 - April 5, 1709) was a French painter, engraver, art critic and diplomat. Life Born at Clamecy, Roger de Piles started his career in art as a pupil of Claude François. informed us at the outset of the eighteenth century, is the "difference of painting, that which distinguishes painting from all other media of visual art." Thus Batchelor's little book, which is immense fun to read, tells the story not only of our love-hate all)air with color but also of modern painting, the meaning of its shift from coming out of tubes to coming out of cans, and its ultimate demise. Or that is one way of understanding Chromophobia's importance to our present moment--to the decades since the burst of psychedelic color that was the Pop '60s, and the antichromatic severity that was Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts . But the book also unpacks the false oppositions and Puritanisms that have dogged our aesthetic history while implicitly championing the taboo-ridden pleasure principle of art. BOOKS: BEST OF 2003 ARTHUR C. DANTO is Johnsonian Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Columbia University, art critic for The Nation, and a contributing editor of Artforum. He is the author, most recently, of The Abuse of Beauty (Open Court Press, 2003). GREIL MARCUS, a Berkeley-based writer, critic, and contributing editor of Artforum, is currently at work on a book about prophecy and American identity and is coediting, with Sean Wilentz, a study of American ballads. A contributing editor of Artforum, KATY SIEGEL teaches contemporary art history and criticism at Hunter College, CUNY CUNY City University of New York . She is currently completing, with Paul Mattick, Art & Money, forthcoming this fall from Thames & Hudson. ROSALIND E. KRAUSS is Meyer Schapiro Professor of Modern Art and Theory at Columbia University and a founding editor of October. She is the author, most recently, of A Voyage on the North Sea: Art in the Age of the Post-Medium Condition (Thames & Hudson, 2000), New York-based artist MARK DION has been exhibiting his science and nature-inflected installations for nearly two decades. An exhibition devoted to his collaborative projects opens next month at the University of Hartford's Joseloff Gallery. A critic and curator based in New York, CARLOS BASUALDO is currently organizing "Tropicalia," a traveling exhibition on late-'60s Brazilian culture that opens in the summer of 2005. MARTHA ROSLER, an artist and professor of visual art, most recently exhibited her work in "24/7: Wilno--Nueva York" at the Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius. Decoys and Disruptions, her book of essays, is forthcoming from MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press this spring. RONALD JONES, an artist and critic, cofounded o-b-o-k, a newly established office for experience design, in Stockholm. He is on the faculty at the Staatliche Hochschule fur Bildende Kunste, Stadelschule, Frankfurt, and at Konstfack in Stockholm. CAROL ARMSTRONG is Doris Stevens Professor in Women's Studies and professor of art and archaeology at Princeton University. Her book Manet Manette was published last year by Yale University Press. PHOTOS: HUGH HALESTOOK (CANTRELL); JACK VARTOOGIAN (RATLIFF); MIRIAM BERKLEY (COOPER); GREG GORMAN (WATERS); DON SNYDER (TAUBIN); NINA SUBIN (O'BRIEN); ARTHUR F, RUBIO (DANTO); PAUL ALEXANDER (MARCUS); PAUL MATTICK (SIEGEL); MARIANA COOK (KRAUSS); JEFF Jeff boob who usually bungles Mutt’s schemes. [Comics: Berger, 48] See : Dimwittedness GIBSON (DION); JULIO GRINBLATT (BASUALDO), |
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