Lesson 9 AA
Lesson 9 AA
Lesson 9
Caught in Between: Modern and Contemporary Art
There are museums that fall under an earlier period for example:
-The Institute of Contemporary Art in London which was founded in 1947 includes in its
mandate “the promotion of art that came to be from that year onwards."
-For the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, its starting point is dated at 1977
-While the TATE framed contemporaneity in a ten-year rolling basis and was placed under the
bounds of their Museum of Contemporary Art
Another source of confusion is the fact that in the colloquial "modern" and "contemporary" are
considered synonymous. however, when these terms are used in the context of art, they refer to
two different (but consecutive) periods.
Modern art
-digression of artists away from past conventions and traditions and towards freedom
-not only reflected in its art, but also way people lived and conducted themselves, the social
issues that were relevant, fashion, music and the wide range of images and activities they were
engaged in
-it saw the heavy mass production of goods, encouraging environment by industrialization, new
technology, urbanization, and rise of commercially driven culture
-Artists were committed to developing a language of their own-original but representative where
they drew the world but in his own terms. That’s why within this period grew a vast number of
different movements
This period can be traced from the 1970s to the present. There is a reason behind this cutoff.
The cutoff was hinged on two reasons:
1. The 1970s saw the emergence of "postmodernism." The affix was a clue that whatever
followed was segregated from its precursor
2. The 1970s saw the decline of the clearer identified artistic movements
Gutai (1950s-1970s)
-means embodiment or concreteness
-goal was not only to explore the materiality of the implements used in the performance, but also
to hold a deeper desire to make sense of the relationship that is struck between the body, the
movements, and the spirit of their interaction during the process of creation.
-straddled between multiple platforms from performance, theatrical events, installation, and even
painting
-the founder of the Gutai Art Association was Yoshihara Jiro in 1952
-one the most important examples of this is "Challenge to the Mud" (1955) by Kazuo Shiraga
-he utilized his body, writhing in a pile of mud. The shapes formed, and the state of the mud
were left as is after his performance, and was kept as part of the exhibition as a kind of action
painting
Minimalism (early 1960s)
- seen as an extreme type of abstraction that favored geometric shapes, color fields, and the use
of objects and materials that had an "industrial" the sparse.
-Painters and sculptors avoided overt symbolism and emotional content, but instead called
attention to the materiality of the works
Postmodernism
-most pertinent movement that solidified the move to contemporary art
-artist's creativity was in its most free with an “anything goes” disposition artworks fell within
the broad spectrum of the humorous to controversial works that challenged not only taste but
also
-there were attempts to overturn the notion that all progress was positive, the hierarchy of races,
and that art has a definitive goal
Contemporary Art
-it overlaps with the acceptance and practice of these movements and they were embedded in a
social order that was in fact somewhat "disordered."
-turn from the traditional notions of what art is: from paintings and sculptures to the more
experimental formats like film, photography, video, performance, installations and site-specific
works, and earth works
-most socially aware and involved form of art
-subject matter was one of the most pressing, heated, and even controversial issues of
contemporary society
Other Contemporary Art Movements
Neo-Pop Art
-renewed interest in pop art specifically to Andy Warhol's works and his contemporaries.
-different from pop art and where taken from of Dada’s first idea in which ready-made materials
were used for the artwork
-Dada was a movement that was very much against the values of the bourgeois, the colonial and
even the national.
-It was both anarchic as it was referencing anarchy--the war ensued because of the values the
movement abhors and despises.
-does not only referenced popular culture, but more importantly, criticized and evaluated it,
-often using popular cultural icons
Photorealism
-resurgence of figurative art, where realistic depictions is a choice, is a proof how varied and
fragmented postmodernism is. I
-painstaking attention to detail is aimed, without asserting an artist's personal style
-in their precision it starts to look like it is a photo without a direct reference to the artist who
created it
Conceptualism
-informed and shaped by pop art
-fought against the idea that art is a commodity
-idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work.
-the artists’ planning and decisions are made beforehand and the execution is a perfunctory affair
Performance Art
-related to conceptual art
-here, the audience may even be an accomplice to the realization of the work.
-may be planned or spontaneous and done live or recorded
-considered as ephemeral works of art.
-not about the medium or the format; rather, it is how a specific context is made in which
through engagement or interaction, questions, concerns, and conditions will be fleshed out
Installation Art
-work where the environment or the space in which the viewer steps into or interacts with is
transformed or altered.
-Usually large-scale
-used of a host of objects, materials, conditions, and even light and aural components.
-can be site-specific and may be temporary or ephemeral in nature.
Example of a public installation art is the "Cadillac Ranch," comprised of 10 Cadillacs of
different models ranging from 1949 to 1964.
Street Art
- related to graffiti art as it is a by-product of the rise of graffiti in the 1980s.
- not traditional in format but are informed by the illustrative, painterly, and print techniques and
even a variety of media (even video projections)
-mostly found in public sphere