Urban Art and the City

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8th Century BC
Acropolis Rock
Ancient Greece
Andrei Tarkovsky
Archangels
Argyro Loukaki
Aris Konstantinidis
art and identity
art and political power
art and the city
artistic transformation of urban space
Byzantine Art
Byzantine urbanism
Byzantium
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city imaginaries
classical city
classical urban art
classical urban sublime
Dense
Direct Democracy
Eastern Mediterranean cities
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Follow
Greek Crisis
Hold
Late Byzantine Period
neoclassical architecture theory
neoclassical monuments
Palladium
Parthenon
Postal Card
Postwar
Roman Agora
Saronic Gulf
spatial palimpsest
Tarkovsky
the city as art
Timeless
Town Hall
urban art
urban creativity
urban grassroots movements
urban identities
urban sublime
Vice Versa
Virgin Hodegetria
Wikipedia Commons

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367132965
  • Weight: 580g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book offers original interdisciplinary insights into cities as a diachronic creation of urban art. It engages in a sequence of historical perspectives to examine urban space as an object of apparent quasi-cycles and processes of constitution, exaltation, imitation, contestation and redemption through art.

Urban art transforms the city into a human-made sublime which is explored in the context of the Eastern Mediterranean. The book probes this process primarily through the example of Athens and Byzantine Constantinople, but also Jerusalem, Cyprus and regional cities, revealing how urban space unavoidably encompasses a spatial and temporal palimpsest which is constantly emerging. It presents new ideas for both the theorization and sensuous conception of artistic reality, architecture, and planning attributes. These extend from archaic, classical and Byzantine urban splendour to current urban decline as constitution and attack on the sublime and back. Urban processes of contestation and redemption respond recently to the new ‘imperialism of debt’ and the positivist, technocratic understandings and demands of Euro-governments and neoliberal institutions, while still evoking older forms of spatial power.

Offering fresh notions on art, architecture, space, antiquity, (post)-modernity and politics of the region, this book will appeal to scholars and students of geography, urban studies, art, restoration, and film theory, architecture, landscape design, planning, anthropology, sociology and history.

Argyro Loukaki is Professor of Greek Art, Architecture and Urban Planning at the Hellenic Open University (HOU). Her research interests include space conception, representation and aesthetics; art in the urban and architectonic space; cultural heritage and restoration of monuments; Mediterranean cultural geography, art, architecture and landscape; the geographical unconscious; links between architecture, art, planning and literature. Her previously published titles with Routledge are Living Ruins, Value Conflicts and The Geographical Unconscious.