
Each One Another: The Self in Contemporary Art - Hardcover
by Rachel Haidu
$39.99
$40.00
Out of Stock
This product is currently out of stock. Enter your email address below to be notified once the product is back in stock
Languages:EnglishPublisher:University of Chicago PressISBN-13:9780226823416ISBN-10:226823415UPC:9780226823416Book Category:ArtBook Subcategory:Subjects & Themes, HistoryBook Topic:Contemporary (1945- )Size:9.00 x 6.10 x 0.60 inchesWeight:0.5512Product ID:SC49NMJKHT
A consideration of how contemporary art can offer a deeper understanding of selfhood. With Each One Another, Rachel Haidu argues that contemporary art can teach us how to understand ourselves as selves--how we come to feel oneness, to sense our own interiority, and to shift between the roles that connect us to strangers, those close to us, and past and future generations. Haidu looks to intergenerational pairings of artists to consider how three aesthetic vehicles--shape in painting, characters in film and video, and roles in dance--allow us to grasp selfhood. Better understandings of our selves, she argues, complement our thinking about identity and subjecthood. She shows how Philip Guston's figurative works explore shapes' descriptive capacities and their ability to investigate history, while Amy Sillman's paintings allow us to rethink expressivity and oneness. Analyzing a 2004 video by James Coleman, Haidu explores how we enter characters through their interior monologues, and she also looks at how a 2011 film by Steve McQueen positions a protagonist's refusal to speak as an argument for our right to silence. In addition, Haidu examines how Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker's distribution of roles across dancers invites us to appreciate formal structures that separate us from one another while Yvonne Rainer's choreography shows how such formal structures also bring us together. Through these examples, Each One Another reveals how artworks allow us to understand oneness, interiority, and how we become fluid agents in the world, and it invites us to examine--critically and forgivingly--our attachments to selfhood.
Languages:EnglishPublisher:University of Chicago PressISBN-13:9780226823416ISBN-10:226823415UPC:9780226823416Book Category:ArtBook Subcategory:Subjects & Themes, HistoryBook Topic:Contemporary (1945- )Size:9.00 x 6.10 x 0.60 inchesWeight:0.5512Product ID:SC49NMJKHT
Rachel Haidu is associate professor of art history and visual and cultural studies at the University of Rochester. She is the author of The Absence of Work: Marcel Broodthaers 19641976.
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Contributor(s)
Author
Free shipping on orders over $75. Standard shipping takes 3-7 business days. Returns accepted within 30 days of purchase.
