Cézanne/Pissarro, Johns/Rauschenberg
Comparative Studies on Intersubjectivity in Modern Art
- Author: Joachim Pissarro, Hunter College, City University of New York
- Date Published: October 2006
- availability: Out of stock in print form with no current plan to reprint
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9780521836401
Hardback
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This book presents a comparative study of two pairs of collaborative artists who worked closely with one another. The first pair, Cézanne and Pissarro, contributed to the emergence of modern art. The second pair, Johns and Rauschenberg, contributed to the demise of modern art. In each case, the two artists entered into a rich and challenging artistic exchange and reaped enormous benefits from this interaction. Joachim Pissarro's comparative study suggests that these interactive dialogues were of great significance for each artist. Taking a cue from the eighteenth-century German philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte, he suggests that the individual is the result of reciprocal encounter. Paradoxically, the modernist tradition has largely presented each of these four artists in isolation. This book thus offers a critique of modernism as essentially monological and as a tradition that resists thinking about art in plural terms.
Read more- First study of two of the foremost artistic collaborations in early and late modern art
- Comparative study of early and late modern art through the angle of intersubjectivity
- Critique of modernism from an unusual perspective; claims that modernism is incapable of thinking of artists in plural terms
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×Product details
- Date Published: October 2006
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9780521836401
- length: 330 pages
- dimensions: 260 x 185 x 24 mm
- weight: 1.03kg
- availability: Out of stock in print form with no current plan to reprint
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Beginnings: Pissarro and Cézanne, Johns and Rauschenberg
2. Modernism as a chain of crests
3. The self in relation to the other
4. Dialogs: intersubjectivity at work between Pissarro and Cézanne, Johns and Rauschenberg
5. What would happen if artists were to rewrite art history?
Conclusion.
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