Art and Street Politics in the Global 1960s

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1960s counterculture political art
1968
Akasegawa Genpei
Allan Kaprow
Amsterdam City Archives
anti-establishment activism
Avant-Garde
avant-garde collectives
Category=AB
Category=AGA
Category=JBCC
Category=NHF
Category=NHTB
Dam
Danish Artist
Deutsches Historisches Museum
Dutch Provos
East Indies
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Geeta Kapur
Global 1960s
Global Art History Project
Hi-Red Center
interdisciplinary art practice
Intermedia Performances
Japanese counterculture
John Tchicai
Judith Rodenbeck
Kosugi Takehisa
LDP.
Municipal Art
Nakajima Yoshio
performance art movements
Provo Movement
Reuben Gallery
Situationism
Situationist Fight
social protest art
Southern Sweden
Swedish Cultural Policy
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum
transnational art networks
Unbeat Organizers
Van Der Lans
Van Der Meijden
Van Duyn
Vincent Van Gogh
West Germany
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367710675
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Apr 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Anarchic street performances in late-1950s Japan; inauguration of the first Happenings in Antwerp and charging of the "magic circle" in Amsterdam; Bauhaus Situationiste and anti-national art exchanges, networks and communes. As "Happener" and "Art Missionary," Yoshio Nakajima’s storied career traverses an astounding range of locations, scenes, movements, media, and performance modes in the global 1960s and 1970s in ways that challenge our notions of the possibilities of art.

Nakajima repeatedly plays a role in jump-starting spaces of possibility, from Tokyo to Ubbeboda, from Spui Square and the Dutch Provos to Antwerp and Sweden. Despite this, Nakajima’s work has paradoxically been largely excluded from accounts where it might have justifiably featured. The present volume represents an international collaboration of researchers working to remedy this oversight. Nakajima’s work demands a reconceptualization of narratives of this art and politics and their specific interrelation to consider his exemplary nonconformity—and its exemplary exclusion.

This history demonstrates the inadequacy of notions of specificity that would oppose an authentic local or national frame to an inauthentic transnational one. Conversely, Nakajima manifests a key dimension of the 1960s as a global event in the interrelation between eventfulness itself and the redrawing of categories of practice and understanding.

William Marotti is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles. He teaches modern Japanese history with an emphasis on art and politics, everyday life, and cultural-historical issues. His works address the 1960s and the politics of 1968 as a global event through examinations of art, cultural politics, and oppositional practices. His publications include Money, Trains and Guillotines: Art and Revolution in 1960s Japan (2013), "The Art of the Everyday, as Crisis: Objets, Installations, Weapons, and the Origin of Politics" (2015) and "The Performance of Police and the Theatre of Protest" (2021).