9780226067988-022606798X-The Experimenters: Chance and Design at Black Mountain College

The Experimenters: Chance and Design at Black Mountain College

ISBN-13: 9780226067988
ISBN-10: 022606798X
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Eva Díaz
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Format: Hardcover 256 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780226067988
ISBN-10: 022606798X
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Eva Díaz
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Format: Hardcover 256 pages

Summary

The Experimenters: Chance and Design at Black Mountain College (ISBN-13: 9780226067988 and ISBN-10: 022606798X), written by authors Eva Díaz, was published by University of Chicago Press in 2014. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other History (Arts History & Criticism, United States History, Higher & Continuing Education) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Experimenters: Chance and Design at Black Mountain College (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used History books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $14.05.

Description

In the years immediately following World War II, Black Mountain College, an unaccredited school in rural Appalachia, became a vital hub of cultural innovation. Practically every major artistic figure of the mid-twentieth century spent some time there: Merce Cunningham, Ray Johnson, Franz Kline, Willem and Elaine de Kooning, Robert Motherwell, Robert Rauschenberg, Dorothea Rockburne, Aaron Siskind, Cy Twombly―the list goes on and on. Yet scholars have tended to view these artists’ time at the College as little more than prologue, a step on their way to greatness. With The Experimenters, Eva Díaz reveals the importance of Black Mountain College―and especially of three key teachers, Josef Albers, John Cage, and R. Buckminster Fuller―to be much greater than that.

Díaz’s focus is on experimentation. Albers, Cage, and Fuller, she shows, taught new models of art making that favored testing procedures rather than personal expression. These methodologies represented incipient directions for postwar art practice, elements of which would be sampled, and often wholly adopted, by Black Mountain students and subsequent practitioners. The resulting works, which interrelate art and life in a way that imbues these projects with crucial relevance, not only reconfigured the relationships among chance, order, and design―they helped redefine what artistic practice was, and could be, for future generations.

Offering a bold, compelling new angle on some of the most widely studied creative figures of modern times, The Experimenters does nothing less than rewrite the story of art in the mid-twentieth century.

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