The New Monuments and the End of Man: U.S. Sculpture...

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The New Monuments and the End of Man: U.S. Sculpture between War and Peace, 1945–1975

Robert Slifkin
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A new study of postwar sculpture in the United States, revealing its nuanced responses to cultural anxieties in the decades following WWII


How leading American artists reflected on the fate of humanity in the nuclear era through monumental sculpture


In the wake of the atomic bombings of Japan in 1945, artists in the United States began to question what it meant to create a work of art in a world where humanity could be rendered extinct by its own hand. The New Monuments and the End of Man examines how some of the most important artists of postwar America revived the neglected tradition of the sculptural monument as a way to grapple with the cultural and existential anxieties surrounding the threat of nuclear annihilation.


Robert Slifkin looks at such iconic works as the industrially evocative welded steel sculptures of David Smith, the austere structures of Donald Judd, and the desolate yet picturesque earthworks of Robert Smithson. Transforming how we understand this crucial moment in American art, he traces the intersections of postwar sculptural practice with cybernetic theory, science-fiction cinema and literature, and the political debates surrounding nuclear warfare. Slifkin identifies previously unrecognized affinities of the sculpture of the 1940s and 1950s with the minimalism and land art of the 1960s and 1970s, and acknowledges the important contributions of postwar artists who have been marginalized until now, such as Raoul Hague, Peter Grippe, and Robert Mallary.


Strikingly illustrated throughout, The New Monuments and the End of Man spans the decades from Hiroshima to the Fall of Saigon, when the atomic bomb cast its shadow over American art.

年:
2019
出版商:
Princeton University Press
語言:
english
頁數:
248
ISBN 10:
0691194262
ISBN 13:
9780691194264
文件:
PDF, 14.14 MB
IPFS:
CID , CID Blake2b
english, 2019
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