Sunday, August 4, 2019
Contemporary Art Essays -- Post-Modernity Post Modernity
Contemporary Art: Dealing with Post-Modernity      âËâ â⬠Art worlds consist of all the people whose activities are necessary to the  production of the characteristic works which that world, and perhaps others as  well, define as art. â⬠¦ By observing how an art world makes those distinctions  rather than trying to make them ourselves we can understand much of what  goes on in that world.... The basic unit of analysis, then, is an art world.â⬠  - Howard Becker (Art Worlds)  Postmodernism deconstructs Modernism like Modernism deconstructed art  Like the Simpson's episode that explained Po-Mo as ââ¬Å"weird for the sake of weirdâ⬠,  Postmodernism accepted the philosophy ââ¬Å"art for the sake of artâ⬠. A very free and  democratic practice, a natural response to the inhibiting Modernist intelligentsia. So  radical is this notion that it was banned in China during the Mao rule. Art after  Modernism became free to reference anything or nothing at all. It no longer needed a  meaning or idea.  It does not mean, however, that Postmodernism itself is free of Ideology. It is a  reaction to Modernism. It analyses and comments on it. Postmodernism rejects  meta-narratives of history, culture, and national identity that were present in  Modernist art. It rejects totalizing theories that are to explain the way people act and  the way the universe works, like the Freudian or Marxist views that science can  explain society. It rejects the concept of cultural unity, of equality, and the view that  one person can speak on behalf of humanity. Postmodernist art is skeptical of late  capitalism and the technological industrial progression. It critiques the concept of  ââ¬Å"individualismâ⬠, and encourages people to consider multiple identities. It embraces  the concept of mul...              ...  the linear narrative of art history.      Works Cited:  Baudillard, Jean. ââ¬Å"The Precession of Simulacraâ⬠. Translated by Paul Foss and Paul  Patton. New York: 1983.  Danto, Arthur. ââ¬Å"The Journal of Philosophyâ⬠. Vol. 61, No. 19. American Philosophical  Association Eastern Division Sixty-First Annual Meeting. (Oct. 15, 1964). pp. 571-  584. Accessed online, 05/10/08.   Howard Becker. ââ¬Å"Art Worldsâ⬠. Berkeley, CA: Univ. of California Press, 1982  Irvine, Martin. ââ¬Å"Lectures, Essays, and Seminar Notesâ⬠. Georgetown University.  Accessed online, 05/11/08.   Jameson, Frederick. "Marxism and the Historicity of Theory." New Literary History  Accessed online, 05/12/08.    /StructuralistMarxism/Jameson/Jameson.htm>                      
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