This book examines public art practices in three eras of social and political upheaval: the 1920s-1930s, 1960s-1970s, and today. Heydays of artistic innovation and provocation, these periods see the rise of grassroots and avant-garde practices that intervene in the crises of their day by reclaiming public space for community building and social transformation. Artists of various cultural, social, and political movements in these times establish the street and other public spaces as laboratories for redefining the nation, culture, and community-in short, for endowing the world with new possibilities. Such revolutionary aesthetics can be found in the public art practices of Jamaican and U.S.-American Garveyism, Mexican muralism, North and South American 1960s theatre and happenings, and the contemporary Zapatista, Occupy Wall Street, and Black Lives Matter movements.
Contents
Introduction
Public Space, Art Practice, and the Social ................................... 1
Chapter I
Parading and Performing in the Streets:
Cultural and Artistic Practices in Garveyism
and the Harlem Renaissance ........................................................ 29
Chapter II
Mexican Avant-Gardes and InterAmerican Flows:
Redefining the Relation between Art Practice
and Public Space in the 1920s and 1930s .................................... 63
Chapter III
The Body as Public Sphere:
Taking Theatre, Performance, and Music to the Streets
in the Turbulent 1960s and 1970s ................................................ 103
Chapter IV
Off the Grid:
Art Practices and Public Space in the Contemporary Period ...... 159
Epilogue ....................................................................................... 211
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Spurred by a new wave of protests across the globe - from Occupy, Black Lives Matter, the Arab Spring, and sundry street marches against neoliberal governments throughout Latin America - Raussert examines how artistic practices in three periods (1920s-30s, 1960s-70s and the new millennium) in the Americas have challenged the control of public space in relation to gender, race, sexuality, class, age. The Inter-American perspective sheds light on common utopian aspirations across time and place, as in the networked movements of indigenous, Afro-descendants and diasporic groups, epitomized by the Zapatista lemma: "So long as the media keep lying, the walls will keep talking." Indeed, this important must-read book, shows how contestatory artists subvert the increasing privatization, consumerization and electronic monitoring of public space and its virtualization in new media, in our own period.
George Yúdice,
Professor of Latin American Studies, and of Modern Languages and Literatures
at the University of Miami, USA
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für Beruf und Forschung
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Produkt-Hinweis
Illustrationen
10
16 farbige Abbildungen, 10 s/w Abbildungen
Maße
Höhe: 21 cm
Breite: 14.8 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-86821-835-0 (9783868218350)
Schweitzer Klassifikation