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A conspiracy of images [ Texto impreso] : Andy Warhol, Gerhard Richter, and the art of the Cold War / John J. Curley.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Haven ; London : Yale University Press, c2013.Description: ix, 279 p. : ilustraciones en blanco y negro y color ; 27 cmISBN:
  • 9780300188431
Other title:
  • Andy Warhol, Gerhard Richter, and the art of the Cold War
Subject(s):
Contents:
Introduction. The art that came in from the cold -- Failures of containment: the case of postwar abstraction -- The development of Andy Warhol's pop eye -- Socialist realism and Gerhard Richter's 'third way' -- Paranoid styles: Warhol's and Richter's conspiracy theories of painting -- The uncontained image: the politics of Warhol's and Richter's blur -- Conclusion. Art and illusion: Cold War art history.
Información biográfica o histórica: "John J. Curley is assistant profesor of art history at Wake Forest University." -- Solapa posterior.Language Note: Inglés.Bibliography: Incluye referencias bibliográficas e índice.Summary: "In October 1962, a set of blurred surveillance photographs brought the world to the brink of nuclear apocalypse during the Cuban missile crisis. The pictures themselves demonstrated little, and explanatory captions were necessary to identify the danger for the public. In the following months, two artists with antithetical backgrounds arrived at a similar aesthetic: Andy Warhol, who began his career as a commercial artist in New York City, turned to the silkscreened replication of violent photographs. Gerhard Richter, who began as a mural painter in socialist Dresden, East Germany, painted blurred versions of personal and media photographs. In A Conspiracy of Images, author John J. Curley explores how the artists' developing aesthetic approaches were informed by the political agency and ambiguity of images produced during the Cold War, particularly those disseminated by the mass media on both sides." -- Solapa anterior.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Monografía prestable Biblioteca FJM Sala general Arte N 6490 .C87 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 01/09/2016 1218428

Introduction. The art that came in from the cold -- Failures of containment: the case of postwar abstraction -- The development of Andy Warhol's pop eye -- Socialist realism and Gerhard Richter's 'third way' -- Paranoid styles: Warhol's and Richter's conspiracy theories of painting -- The uncontained image: the politics of Warhol's and Richter's blur -- Conclusion. Art and illusion: Cold War art history.

"In October 1962, a set of blurred surveillance photographs brought the world to the brink of nuclear apocalypse during the Cuban missile crisis. The pictures themselves demonstrated little, and explanatory captions were necessary to identify the danger for the public. In the following months, two artists with antithetical backgrounds arrived at a similar aesthetic: Andy Warhol, who began his career as a commercial artist in New York City, turned to the silkscreened replication of violent photographs. Gerhard Richter, who began as a mural painter in socialist Dresden, East Germany, painted blurred versions of personal and media photographs. In A Conspiracy of Images, author John J. Curley explores how the artists' developing aesthetic approaches were informed by the political agency and ambiguity of images produced during the Cold War, particularly those disseminated by the mass media on both sides." -- Solapa anterior.

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