This essay reads 1960s “photorealist” painting and its critical reception against two sets of contemporary social analyses. First, it places these artistic and critical works next to Pierre Bourdieu\u27s 1965 text Photography: A Middle-Brow Art, demonstrating that, although the critical literature surrounding “photorealism” tended to assume that its involvement with photography grew out of a desire for an objective realism, contemporary thought on photography was anything but convinced of the medium\u27s transparency. Second, it looks to cultural critics like Susan Sontag and Jacob Brackman to propose that, rather than seeing the art of this period in opposition to the heated political battles of “the sixties,” the presumably “styleless” wo...
Social theory and photographic aesthetics both engage with issues of representation, realism and val...
This dissertation examines transformations in painting during the 1960s. Countering repeated pronoun...
In a volume dedicated to Professor Alex Potts, this essay looks at radical photography in 1970s Brit...
This essay reads 1960s “photorealist” painting and its critical reception against two sets of contem...
textArtworks made in New York between 1958 and 1965, the heyday of color-field painting, minimalism...
Photorealism, a style that transfers photographic imagery and conventions to the medium of painting,...
In this article I claim that Walter Benjamin\u27s essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Re...
This essay addresses the issue of the relationship between abstraction and realism that it argues is...
In the early 1970s, New York gallerist Louis K. Meisel devised a formal set of criteria to identify ...
This dissertation offers a reconsideration of the uses of photography under the aegis of Conceptual ...
The “death of painting” is a mantra repeated throughout the twentieth century, at once taken for gra...
The aim of this paper is to explore what could be meant by modernist portraiture. On the face of it,...
At the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession in 1912, Alfred Stieglitz received the final proofs f...
In the often generous current raft of publications about painting, the season’s contributions help u...
Italo Calvino once referred to photography as an “anthropologically new object”, while Roland Barthe...
Social theory and photographic aesthetics both engage with issues of representation, realism and val...
This dissertation examines transformations in painting during the 1960s. Countering repeated pronoun...
In a volume dedicated to Professor Alex Potts, this essay looks at radical photography in 1970s Brit...
This essay reads 1960s “photorealist” painting and its critical reception against two sets of contem...
textArtworks made in New York between 1958 and 1965, the heyday of color-field painting, minimalism...
Photorealism, a style that transfers photographic imagery and conventions to the medium of painting,...
In this article I claim that Walter Benjamin\u27s essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Re...
This essay addresses the issue of the relationship between abstraction and realism that it argues is...
In the early 1970s, New York gallerist Louis K. Meisel devised a formal set of criteria to identify ...
This dissertation offers a reconsideration of the uses of photography under the aegis of Conceptual ...
The “death of painting” is a mantra repeated throughout the twentieth century, at once taken for gra...
The aim of this paper is to explore what could be meant by modernist portraiture. On the face of it,...
At the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession in 1912, Alfred Stieglitz received the final proofs f...
In the often generous current raft of publications about painting, the season’s contributions help u...
Italo Calvino once referred to photography as an “anthropologically new object”, while Roland Barthe...
Social theory and photographic aesthetics both engage with issues of representation, realism and val...
This dissertation examines transformations in painting during the 1960s. Countering repeated pronoun...
In a volume dedicated to Professor Alex Potts, this essay looks at radical photography in 1970s Brit...