
Things American
Description
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Things American: Art Museums and Civic Culture in the Progressive Era tells the story of the civic reformers and arts professionals who brought museums from the realm of exclusivity into the progressive fold of libraries, schools, and settlement houses. Jeffrey Trask's history focuses on New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, which stood at the center of this movement to preserve artifacts from the American past for social change and Americanization. Metropolitan trustee Robert de Forest and pioneering museum professional Henry Watson Kent influenced a wide network of fellow reformers and cultural institutions. Drawing on the teachings of John Dewey and close study of museum developments in Germany and Great Britain, they expanded audiences, changed access policies, and broadened the scope of what museums collect and display. They believed that tasteful urban and domestic environments contributed to good citizenship and recognized the economic advantages of improving American industrial production through design education. Trask follows the influence of these people and ideas through the 1920s and 1930s as the Met opened its innovative American Wing while simultaneously promoting modern industrial art.
Things American is not only the first critical history of the Metropolitan Museum. The book also places museums in the context of the cultural politics of the progressive movement-illustrating the limits of progressive ideas of democratic reform as well as the boldness of vision about cultural capital promoted by museums and other cultural institutions.
Reviews / Votes
"Jeffrey Trask's well-researched and engagingly written history of New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art explores the expanding educational role of museums during the Progressive Era. . . . Trask successfully establishes the Met's efforts at cultural democracy and their unintended consequences." (Journal of American History) "In its revealing and canny glimpse of the convergence of money, stuff, intelligence, and social zeal in one institution at one critical time, Trask's work would constitute a worthy success." (American Historical Review) "Things American gives us, at last, a history of the Metropolitan Museum of Art based on genuine archival materials. Moreover, it reorients our thinking about art museums in the United States, demonstrating that there were important democratic, utilitarian, and civic impulses at work behind them. The book also broadens our thinking about progressivism, reminding us how it shaped art museums and how those museum-related programs it spawned continued beyond World War I." (Steven Conn, author of Do Museums Still Need Objects?)More details
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Person
Content
Introduction. Museums and Society
Chapter 1. Progressive Connoisseurs: The Intellectual Origins of Education Reform in Museums
Chapter 2. The De Forest Faction's Progressive Museum Agenda
Chapter 3. The Educational Value of American Things: Balancing Usefulness and Connoisseurship
Chapter 4. The Arts of Peace: World War I and Cultural Nationalism
Chapter 5. The Art of Living: The American Wing and Public History
Chapter 6. Americanism in Design: Industrial Arts and Museums
Epilogue. Depression Modern: Institutional Sponsors and Progressive Legacies
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
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