Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


Artist and Identity in Twentieth-Century America

Artist and Identity in Twentieth-Century America

Artist and Identity in Twentieth-Century America

Matthew Baigell, Rutgers University, New Jersey
April 2001
Available
Paperback
9780521776011
£31.00
GBP
Paperback

    This volume brings together a selection of essays by one of the leading scholars of American art. Matthew Baigell examines the work of a variety of artists, including Edward Hopper, Thomas Hart Benton, Ben Shahn, and Frank Stella, relating their art works closely to the social and cultural contexts in which they were created. Identifying important and recurring themes in this body of art, such as the persistence of Emersonian values, the search for national and regional identity, aspects of alienation, and the loss of individuality, he also explores the personal and religious identities of artists as revealed in their works. Collectively, Baigell's work demonstrates the importance of America as the defining element in American art.

    • Brings together a selection of essays by one of the leading scholars of American art
    • Artists include Edward Hopper, Thomas Hart Benton, Ben Shahn, and Frank Stella
    • Identifies recurring themes, such as the persistence of Emersonian values, alienation, and the search for national and regional identity

    Product details

    April 2001
    Paperback
    9780521776011
    308 pages
    229 × 152 × 18 mm
    0.46kg
    47 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Walt Whitman and early twentieth-century American art
    • 2. American landscape painting and national identity: the Stieglitz circle and Emerson
    • 3. The silent witness of Edward Hopper
    • 4. American art and national identity: the 1920s
    • 5. The beginnings of 'The American Wave' and the Depression
    • 6. Grant Wood revisited
    • 7. The relevancy of Curry's paintings of black freedom
    • 8. Thomas Hart Benton and the Left
    • 9. The Emersonian presence in abstract expressionism
    • 10. American art around 1960 and the loss of self
    • 11. Pearlstein's people
    • 12. Robert Morris's latest works: slouching toward Armageddon
    • 13. A ramble around early earthworks
    • 14. Reflections on/of Richard Estes
    • 15. Ben Shahn's Post-War Jewish paintings
    • 16. Barnett Newman's stripe paintings and Kaballah: a Jewish take
    • 17: Postscript: another kind of canon.
      Author
    • Matthew Baigell , Rutgers University, New Jersey