Term
|
Definition
- spiritual emotional change/ challenge for herself and the audience - stood behind a table, on the table was a loaded gun and other violent things - invited audience to use the items whichever way they want - a test of the audience, how comfortable to you feel doing something to a complete stranger - didn’t think anyone would have the guts to pick up a loaded gun - people began to threaten her – she was injured and ended up calling off the performance before she had intended to risks escalated quickly, more than she had expected PERFORMANCE ART/ BODY ART |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Bruce McLean - Pose Work for Plinths - 1971
• Student of Anthony Caro • Formal in his approach, an idea in his generation of challenging the idea of sculpture through performance • 1971 and 1974 mocked traditional values and expolored where art can go. • Comment on Henry Moore • Minimalist notion of repition • Artist as art and as sculpture • Up and coming performance art mentality • Art seems to be a source of fame for the artist so why not make the artist art • Looking at the tradition of art history and calling them bull shit PEREFORMANCE/CONCEPTUAL/BODY ART |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Chris Burden - Shoot - 1971
- How much he can take and how much the audience can watch
- A friend fired a bullet with him with a planned spot in his arm - Reenacting society that’s happening in the state --> guns are a huge topic of debate in the state - accident is possibility - continued making work that was very dangerous to itself
PERFORMANCE ART/BODY ART |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Sol LeWitt - Cube Structure Based on 9 Modules - 1976-77
• looks as though it would fit Greenberg’s ideas perfectly • based on ratios allowing people to intellectually understand not emotionally • text as complement to art work but not the work itself • work subject to viewing context • randomness and chance have some elements within it relating to duchamp, but he would never admit to there being any chance in it • cube open frame • like conceptual art often started with a system form which art is generated
• Viewer will see it as the light and gallery change it but more importantly as a mathematical equation – nothing emotional to understand, but it does jut into your space • isnt really conceptual art but crosses over boundaries with it
MINIMALIST/CONCEPTUAL |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Victor Burgin - Office at Night - 1986
• Photograph is like any other sign systems • Not truthful, its constructive just as any other art medium is constructive • Impact of social roles shown
• Sets up the picture next to other mediums • Copy of Edward hoppers’ the office at night • The secretary is almost like the sex object but not overtly • Just an object but also insinuates how sign systems play into how we view our own social roles
POST MODERNISM/ social commentary/ documents |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Carrie Weems - Untitled - 1990
• There is text that goes with this series of photos • Staged, but that doesn't matter
• Speaking of the everyday relations that we have • The idea of what goes around the kitchen table is just as important as what happens in our own space • Photography • Artist takes on a very social role
POST MODERNISM/social commentary/ DOCUMENTS |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Thomas Struth - Art Institute of Chicago I - 1990
• Series made of images taken of people at galleries • Set up of different levels of viewing (like adod hannah) • His work seems as though you aren’t looking at an art piece you are looking at the art of looking • You become self conscious of yourself at the gallery • Post modernism inherited the challenge to the viewers space and the viewer from modernism
DOCUMENTS/POSTMODERNISM
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Bernd and Hiller Becher - Gas Tower (telescoping type) Off Polanski Bridge - 1981 |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Jennifer Bartlett - Rhapsody - 1975-76
• started her career as a conceptual artist • decided she would eliminate all that she didn’t like from the painting • used hobby store enamel painting, focus on the act of paint – like later challenges to art – more available paint than oil • used a system that was not only grids but arbitrarily decided what would go in the squares – conceptual • grouped the squares by loose things like colours and what not • never commited to one style, but commited to the idea which is conceptualist • eventually expanded her pallet using more colours and styles form figural/abstract etc • inheritance from conceptualism – based on an idea and a system whether or not they fit the old rules of painting • rejecting the idea of a personal style, you cant tell by the painting that its her • can look at it any way you want – you create your own narrative as the viewer
POSTMODERN/CONCEPTUAL |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Richard Prince - Untitled Cowboy - 1993
• drawn from advertising, Marlboro Advertisement • taken portions of already existing photos and making them his own work • Marlboro man is a manly mans man, playing on the idea of how men are represented in this advertising - and questions it • if you want to be rugged and tough you should smoke Marlboro • court case in the 1840s because a photographer had taken a photo of a country manner, the owner sued the photographer • you cant own a picture of my house • photography is a representation, so he had just made a representation of it • image of the house not the reality of it • photographer of the advertisement sued Prince for taking his photo – replied I took a photograph of your photograph, took a representation • less than an 80% similarity - a reapropriation
POSTMODERNISM |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Barbra Kruger - We Won't Play Nature to Your Culture - 1983
- Idea that women are more nurturing, Men are more part of industry
- women are seen as part of nature - she is challenging this |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Ilya Kabako - the man who flew into space from his apartment
• Moved to Czech and made a series of these • Takes a white gallery room and reconstructs someone else’s identity and their like • Makes a room inside of the white room for the contraptions • We have arrived after the event • Creates a fictional character • The idea of presence through absence there’s no figure or person here but we have an idea of the person who once lived in this room • Walking into a space that is no longer neutral it’s a fictional world of someone else’s – how we construct personalities through the objects you have
|
|
|
Term
Museum as an anonymous site: |
|
Definition
• Site specificity is not a necessity • one museum is easily exchanged for another one • A return to narrative elements – for a while (post Greenberg) narrative wasn’t part of art- With the post modern shift to pluralism it allows for the return of narrative • The viewer is left to construct a narrative and make one up • Personal in the public |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
• False sunrise/sunset • Installed in Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall • Popular draw • People sunbathing in it • He’s installed a mirror on the ceiling with bulbs underneath, hall is full of dry ice so there’s mist in the air • Kept at a warm temperature • Bringing us back to contact with natural processes • Problem of art vs. entertainment |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Christine Hill - Volksboutique - 1997
• Opened a used clothing store and functioned as such • Positioned in terms of an art installation • Pulls a question of social issues, why do we need used clothing stores • Makes a social difference and can help people |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Eric Fishcl - Bad Boy
• Well versed in conceptual thought • Took up the idea of realism to obscure what was going on in his paintings • Work is much more sophisticated than it appears • Style similar to American realism of pre war period but transformed to fit examination of suburban neuroses and repressions
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
• First an abstract expressionist then “broke free” of other peoples styles • Used a grid – project a slide on the canvas then he would graph on little squares and paint each square one by one • Allows him to work around other peoples styles • End result looks realistic even though its based on conceptual minimal practices • Minimalist in creation projected image, gridded, and copied as accurately as possible • Attention should be on the craft – reference to the process art that came earlier • Wanted to draw more attention to what he’s actually painting than on the style |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Alice Neel - Linda Nochlin and Daisy
• People ignored the work she was doing for years • Figural historians came to find her – a direct anticendant to what we’re seeing in art now • Went from completely unknown to having solo shows in the moma • Idea of post modernism and its challenge ended up encorporating more artists than had been completely changing the history • Saw herself as a collector of soul • Interested in the soul of people who sat for her – wanted their presence to shine through the work • Inspired fear in her sitters that she would see an iner personality that they had tried to hide from others • The artist could perceive things that no one else could perceive • Thought that this was returning to the idea of the artistic genious that they had thought they released – criticism • Became a key figure in the feminist reading of art history even though she wasn’t sure where she stood in feminism
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Susan Rothenberg - Two-Tone
• Figuration but also realistic representation • The focus is more on the materiality of paint • Meeting place between realism and abstraction – neither is fulfilled • Imagery on the edge of figuration and abstraction as form is reodid by painterly strokes • Inner imagery combined with mythical forms • A lot of her work deals with horses – sees it as a wild loyal object stood for human feel in the past • Connected to the history of art
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Anselm Keifer - Wayland's song
• based on a series of scandanavian poems • based on the poems that have become charged subject matter after the war because of hitlers use of them • taps into german romantic tradition • interested in personal identity and cultural origins • based on the Eddas on which Wagners the Rings of the Nibelung also based
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Mierle Ukeles Hartford Wash Washing Tracks, • Domestic duties of women and making the labour that they do without pa and make it very public • Idea as paid domestics – cleaning ladies and maids • Making public jobs that women had been socially pushed into public |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Adrian Piper - I am the Locus #2 - part of the mythical being series
• interested in social interactions and feeling as otherness • goes out to very white areas as a black man • the idea of playing a role in society • forcing people to react to her so she could experience other identities • interested in conventions of social interaction, especially in regards to otherness • self-objectification, not only does she make herself into a work of art but she puts herself out to be looked at • played a lot with identity and how people see it
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Carol Sheeman - Interior Scroll
• Paints her body to outline the image of a nude • Reads from the book • Starts pulling a long thin scroll from her vagina • As the scroll goes on it begins to address more and more women, their bodies and the difference between their art
|
|
|