Couze Venn: Occidentalism: Modernity and Subjectivity (2000)
Filed under book | Tags: · postcolonialism, postmodernism

“This book critically addresses the `becoming West’ of Europe and investigates the `becoming Modern’ of the world. Drawing on the work of Derrida, Foucault, Levinas, Lyotard, Merleau-Ponty and Ricoeur, the book proposes that the question of postmodernity is inseparable from that of post-coloniality. The argument fully conveys the sense that modernity is in crisis. It maps out a new genealogy of the birth of the modern and suggests a new way of grounding the idea of an emancipation of being.
Postcolonialism has emerged as a central topic in contemporary social science and cultural studies. This book informs readers as to the central strands of the debate and introduces a host of new ideas which will be a rich fund for other writers and researchers.”
Publisher SAGE, 2000
Published in association with Theory, Culture & Society
ISBN 0761954120, 9780761954125
256 pages
PDF (updated on 2021-12-1)
Comment (0)Charles Green: The Third Hand. Collaboration in Art from Conceptualism to Postmodernism (2001)
Filed under book | Tags: · art, art criticism, art history, collaboration, collaborative art, conceptual art, participation, postmodernism

A major reevaluation of collaboration’s role in art since 1968.
The lone artist is a worn cliché of art history but one that still defines how we think about the production of art. Since the 1960s, however, a number of artists have challenged this image by embarking on long-term collaborations that dramatically altered the terms of artistic identity. In The Third Hand, Charles Green offers a sustained critical examination of collaboration in international contemporary art, tracing its origins from the evolution of conceptual art in the 1960s into such stylistic labels as Earth Art, Systems Art, Body Art, and Performance Art. During this critical period, artists around the world began testing the limits of what art could be, how it might be produced, and who the artist is. Collaboration emerged as a prime way to reframe these questions.
Green looks at three distinct types of collaboration: the highly bureaucratic identities created by Joseph Kosuth, Ian Burn, Mel Ramsden and other members of Art & Language in the late 1960s; the close-knit relationships based on marriage or lifetime partnership as practiced by the Boyle Family—Anne and Patrick Poirier, Helen Mayer Harrison and Newton Harrison; and couples-like Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Gilbert & George, or Marina Abramovic and Ulay—who developed third identities, effacing the individual artists almost entirely. These collaborations, Green contends, resulted in new and, at times, extreme authorial models that continue to inform current thinking about artistic identity and to illuminate the origins of postmodern art, suggesting, in the process, a new genealogy for art in the twenty-first century.
Published by the University of Minnesota Press, 2001
ISBN 0868405884, 9780868405889
248 pages
PDF (updated on 2012-8-3)
Comment (1)