Description:
Abstract art in its many forms has been a dominant mode in the visual arts for the better part of a century. Popular histories usually trace "abstraction" as a succession of style or "isms, " each set within its particular art-historical context, assuming a general familiarity with this kind of critical narrative. In Abstract Art, historian Mel Gooding describes the mode in a clear, accessible manner, tracking the constantly shifting meanings of abstraction and its place in twentieth century art. Gooding provides the requisite imaginative response that abstract art demands.
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Mel Gooding offers readings of specific paintings and sculptures -- by artists such as Kandinsky, Mondrian, Gabo and Pollock -- treating them as exemplary of particular tendencies within the overlapping histories of abstraction. The book defines distinctions between types of abstract art that may seem similar and discovers underlying correspondences between those that may seem different, enabling the reader to identify links between abstract works across traditional art-historical periods.
Product notice
Returnable at the third party seller's discretion and may come without consumable supplements like access codes, CD's, or workbooks.
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