Unpackaging Art of the 1980s

Regular price €67.99
A01=Alison Pearlman
Author_Alison Pearlman
Category=ABA
Category=AGA
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eq_non-fiction

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226651453
  • Weight: 482g
  • Dimensions: 16 x 23mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jun 2003
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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American art of the 1980s is as misunderstood as it is notorious. Critics of the time feared that market hype and self-promotion threatened the integrity of art. They lashed out at contemporary art, questioning the validity of particular media and methods and dividing the art into opposing camps. While the controversies have since subsided, critics still view art of the 1980s as a stylistic battlefield. Alison Pearlman rejects this picture, which is truer of the period's criticism than of its art. Pearlman reassesses the works and careers of six artists who became critics' biggest targets. In each of three chapters, she pairs two artists the critics viewed as emblematic of a given trend: Julian Schnabel and David Salle in association with Neo-Expressionism; Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring vis-a-vis Graffiti Art; and Peter Halley and Jeff Koons in relation to Simulationism. Pearlman shows how all these artists shared important but unrecognized influences and approaches: a crucial and overwhelming inheritance of 1960s and 1970s Conceptualism, a Warholian understanding of public identity, and a deliberate and nuanced use of past styles and media. Through in-depth discussions of works, from Haring's body-paintings of Grace Jones to Schnabel's movie "Basquiat", Pearlman demonstrates how these artists' interests exemplified a broader, generational shift unrecognized by critics. She sees this shift as starting not in the 1980s but in the mid-1970s, when key developments in artistic style, art-world structures, and consumer culture converged to radically alter the course of American art. "Unpackaging Art of the 1980s" offers an innovative approach to one of the most significant yet least understood episodes in 20th-century art.