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Advancing American Art: Painting, Politics, and Cultural Confrontation at Mid-Century
Maltby Sykes Taylor D. Littleton
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Description for Advancing American Art: Painting, Politics, and Cultural Confrontation at Mid-Century
Paperback. Tells us something about America after the war, when the nation sought to reconcile its sacrificial experiences from the Depression and in World War II with its role on the international scene. This book captures a transitional moment in US history while also serving as a catalog of the 38 masterpieces purchased by Auburn University. Num Pages: 176 pages, 38 full-colour illustrations. BIC Classification: 1KBB; 3JJG; 3JJPG; ACX. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 152 x 12. Weight in Grams: 426.
A representative collection of avant-garde American paintings from the 1930s and '40s. Conceived and funded by the State Department in 1946 as part of a new emphasis in international diplomacy, the exhibit of paintings called Advancing American Art was launched on what was enthusiastically projected as an extended goodwill tour of Europe and Latin America. But almost immediately the exhibit was attacked by conservative groups as ""un-American"" and ""subversive"" and its abstract paintings ridiculed in the national media, in Congress, and by no less a critic than President Truman. Following their recall by Secretary Marshall in 1947, the exhibit's paintings were quietly declared surplus property and sold under rather curious circumstances by the War Assets Administration. Most of the collection was acquired by a small number of public universities in what could be called the art bargain of the century, since works by such figures as Marin, O'Keefe, Shahn, Dove, Kuniyoshi, and Hartley were sold for $100 or less. The chronicle of this exhibit tells us something about America after the war, when the nation sought to reconcile its sacrificial experiences from the Depression and in World War II with its new role on the international scene. Defining the figures of confrontation that challenged America's tenuous self-conceptions at the time, this book captures a significant transitional moment in U.S. history while also serving as a catalog of the 38 masterpieces purchased by Auburn University.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2005
Publisher
Fire Ant Books
Condition
New
Number of Pages
176
Place of Publication
Alabama, United States
ISBN
9780817352585
SKU
V9780817352585
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Maltby Sykes Taylor D. Littleton
Taylor D. Littleton is W. Kelly Mosley Professor of Science at Auburn University. Maltby Sykes was Emeritus Professor of Art at Auburn University. Leon F. Litwack is a Pulitzer Prize - winning historian at the University of California, Berkeley
Reviews for Advancing American Art: Painting, Politics, and Cultural Confrontation at Mid-Century
The Auburn collection is a substantial treasure, documents remarkably well a period critical to the development of American painting, and includes works of excellent quality. Its extraordinary history gives it great symbolic significance, and Professors Littleton and Sykes deserve much credit for a well-researched, intelligently presented study. - Southern Humanities Review