American Encounters: Art, History, and Cultural IdentityPearson Education, Incorporated, 2008 - 686 pagina's American Encounters is a long-awaited dynamic new narrative of the history of American art that focuses on historical encounters among diverse cultures, upon broad structural transformations such as the rise of the middle classes and the emergence of consumer and mass culture, and on the fluid exchanges between high art and vernacular expression. The text emphasizes the intersections among cultures and populations, as well as the influences, borrowings, and appropriations that have enriched and vitalized our collective cultural heritage. There was a readily perceived need for an up-to-date survey of American art that addressed the thematic, cultural, and historical concerns of the field in the 21st century. American Encounters offers a new narrative of American art organized around the theme of cross-cultural exchanges. It locates America at the cross-roads of cultural encounters between Asia, Africa, Europe, and the New World, for over five centuries. The authors do not treat traditions separately, rather they explore how peoples and cultures encounter and influence each other and then evolve based on an exchange of ideas, materials etc. |
Inhoudsopgave
PART | 1 |
Mississippian Culture | 9 |
Arctic Alaska | 15 |
Copyright | |
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American Encounters: Art, History, and Cultural Identity Angela L. Miller Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2008 |
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abstract Abstract Expressionism aesthetic African American Alaska Alfred Stieglitz American art American artists antebellum architects architecture Armory Show audience Augustus Saint-Gaudens Boston building Campbells Campbells Campbells carved Catlin Church Civil Collection colonial color Conceptual art culture decades depicts Eakins early eighteenth embodied encounter England Europe European exhibition expression Fenimore Art Museum figure forms French frontier Gallery Hispanic human identity immigrants Indian indigenous industrial John labor landscape lives Louis Sullivan Massachusetts Mexico modern modernist Museum of Art Native American nature Navajo nineteenth century North objects Oil on canvas painter painting photographs Plains political popular portrait prints production Pueblo quilt region scene sculpture shape slaves social society SOUP space Spanish style suggests symbolic Thomas Eakins tion Tlingit trade traditions transformed United urban viewer vision visual Washington Watercolor West Winslow Homer women York