Sculpture Since 1945
Sculpture Since 1945
An innovative examination of post-war sculpture
Since 1945 the modern revolution in sculpture has gathered pace, and sculpture has now ceased to be the fixed category it once was. In recent decades the modernist idea of sculpture across the UK, America, and Europe, has been challenged, and issues such as nationalityand politics have been brought in to the arena of public discussion.
In this ground-breaking account of the development of post-War sculpture Andrew Causey examines innovative and avant-garde works in relation to contemporary events, festivals, commissions, the marketplace, and the changing functions of museums. He explores the use of everyday objects and the importance of sculptural context, discussing figurative and non-figurative works, Anti-form, Minimalism, experimental form, Earth Art, landscape sculpture, installation, and Performance Art. The holistic picture of post-War sculpture which emerges establishes for the first time the key events and themes round which future debate will centre.
From the pre-publication reviews:
Andrew Causey weaves his way adroitly through the labyrinth of post-War sculpture ... No one else has charted the territory so comprehensively
Contents
Introduction
1. European Sculpture at End of the Second World War
2. The New Sculpture
3. Sculpture and the Everyday
4. Modernism and Minimalism
5. `Anti-Form`
6. Natural Materials
7. Public Spaces
8. Object and Figure: Sculpture Since 1980
Notes, List of Illustrations, Bibliographic Essay, Timeline, Index
Series: Oxford History of Art
Category: Képzőművészet / szobrászat, Művészettörténet