List of Figures Acknowledgements Copyright Credits Introduction Figures 1. “Real Dead” 2. “Al Held” 3. “In Another Light” 4. “The Reality of Abstraction” 5. “The Uncomfortable Armchair: Abstraction and Decoration” 6. “Wandering Color: Arbitrariness, Disjunction, and Decoration in American Art of the Sixties” 7. “The Rutgers Group: Garden State Avant-Garde” 8. “Expressing the Abstract” 9. “Gees Bend Modern” 10. Excerpts from Imagining the Present: Context, Content and the Role of the Critic 11. “Ab-Ex Confidential: The Way They Were” 12. “Martín Ramírez: Narratives of Displacement and Memory” 13. “The Dream of Aboriginal Art” 14. “The Guardians of the Avant-Garde” 15. “Robert Morris: The Order of Disorder” 16. “West of Eden” 17. “Harmony & Discord” 18. “The Four Corners of Painting” 19. “Talk/Show: Language and the Resistant Artwork” 20. “Stop, Look and Listen! Mel Bochner Strong Language” 21. “Through Color” 22. “Hold Still: Looking at Photo-Realism” 23. “The Here and Then” 24. “Art Between Form and Anti-Form” 25. “Frames and Personas” 26. “Inside Outsider” 27. “The Unusual Suspects: A View of Abstraction” Index
The critic and scholar Richard Kalina examines the aesthetic, social and political conditions of contemporary art, addressing questions about how works are made, how they appear, and what they tell us about the changing definition of art.
Richard Kalina is Professor of Art at Fordham University, USA. He is the Editor of Imagining the Present: Context, Content, and the Role of the Critic (2006) and a Contributing Editor to the monthly magazine Art in America.
For over 30 years, artist and critic Richard Kalina has asked his
readers to look beyond artworld rhetoric for authenticity and value
in our ever-changing visual landscape. This selection of essays
traces key developments and A-list artists, while foregrounding
influences and individuals on the margins of accepted artworld
practices.
*René Paul Barilleaux, Head of Curatorial Affairs, McNay Art
Museum, USA*
In this series of essays, Richard Kalina takes us on an expansive
and insightful expedition through some of the most salient art and
art criticism of the post-war years. In doing so, he articulates
coherent and meaningful analyses of some of Modernism’s (and
post-Modernism’s) most persistently elusive concepts.
*Marshall N. Price, Chief Curator and Nancy A. Nasher and David J.
Haemisegger Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Nasher Museum
of Art at Duke University, USA*
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