Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | N 6490 .K864 2005 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5119105 |
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | ||||||
N 6490 .K4 1970 The artist and society. | N 6490 .K727 1985 The originality of the avant-garde and other modernist myths / | N 6490 .K73 2010 Perpetual inventory / | N 6490 .K864 2005 The end of art / | N 6490 .K93 2004 One place after another : site-specific art and locational identity / | N 6490 .L7783 1999 Artoday / | N 6490 .M43 1964 Collage and found art |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 193-201) and index.
The changing of the art guard -- The aesthetic maligned : Duchamp and Newman -- Seminal entropy : the paradox of modern art -- The decline of the cult of the unconscious : running on empty -- Mirror, mirror on the worldly wall, why is art no longer the truest religion of all? : the God that lost faith in itself -- Postscript : abandoning and rebuilding the studio.
Donald Kuspit argues that art is over because it has lost its aesthetic import. Art has been replaced by "postart," a term invented by Alan Kaprow, as a new visual category that elevates the banal over the enigmatic, the scatological over the sacred, cleverness over creativity. Tracing the demise of aesthetic experience to the works and theory of Marcel Duchamp and Barnett Newman, Kuspit argues that devaluation is inseparable from the entropic character of modern art, and that anti-aesthetic postmodern art is its final state. In contrast to modern art, which expressed the universal human unconscious, postmodern art degenerates into an expression of narrow ideological interests. In reaction to the emptiness and stagnancy of postart, Kuspit signals the aesthetic and human future that lies with the New Old Masters. A sweeping and incisive overview of the development of art throughout the twentieth century, The End of Art points the way to the future for the visual arts.
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