Framing America
A Social History of American Art
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Word Count
140,000 words, Guess
Page Count
560 pages
Physical Format
Paperback
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveframingamericaso0000pohl
- ISBN-100500283346
- ISBN-139780500283349
- LibraryThing311249
- Goodreads890619
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number2001093466
- OCLC Control Number49751212
- Open LibraryOL7654226M
Classifications
- LCCN6512 .P59 2002
Description
Framing America's consistent presentation of the resonance between art and history offers a coherent sense of the evolution of a new, generously defined conception of American art. For more than a generation, critics and scholars have been revising and expanding the customary definition of American art. A tradition once assumed to be mainly European and oriented toward painting and sculpture has been enriched by the inclusion of other media such as ceramics, needlework, and illustration, and the work of previously marginalized groups such as Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans. Now, in a brilliant combination of original scholarship and synthesis, Frances Pohl's Framing America provides the first comprehensive survey of this new, enlarged vision of American art. Here are the many strands of North America's history and visual culture: the first contacts of the Spanish with the Aztecs and other Native Americans; the post-Revolutionary definition of nationhood; the visionary feeling for landscape and nature; the images of social and military conflict of the nineteenth century; and the tempering of the twentieth century's heady plunge into modernism by the Depression, World War II, the Cold War, and the culture wars. Pohl's account is an adroitly inclusive fusion of many themes. As our appreciation of the rich cultural diversity of American life has grown, our sense of American art. Abstract:
Subjects
Other Editions
- Framing America: A Social History of American Art
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