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The Great Migrator - Hiroko Ikegami

The Great Migrator

Robert Rauschenberg and the Global Rise of American Art

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
296 Seiten
2014
MIT Press (Verlag)
978-0-262-52611-1 (ISBN)
CHF 15,90 inkl. MwSt
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Robert Rauschenberg on tour in 1964 and the early globalization of the art world.

In 1964, Robert Rauschenberg, already a frequent transatlantic traveler, became even more peripatetic, joining the Merce Cunningham Dance Company as costume and set designer for its first world tour. Rauschenberg and the company visited thirty cities in fourteen countries throughout Europe and Asia. During the tour, he not only devised sets and costumes but also enacted his own performances and created works of art, often using local materials and collaborating with local art communities.

In The Great Migrator, Hiroko Ikegami examines Rauschenberg's activities abroad and charts the increasing international dominance of American art during that period. Unlike other writers, who have viewed the export of American art during the 1950s and 1960s as another form of Cold War propagandizing (and famous American artists as cultural imperialists), Ikegami sees the global rise of American art as a cross-cultural phenomenon in which each art community Rauschenberg visited was searching in different ways for cultural and artistic identity in the midst of Americanization. Rauschenberg's travels and collaborations established a new kind of transnational network for the postwar art world-prefiguring the globalization of art before the era of globalization. Ikegami focuses on Rauschenberg's stops in four cities: Paris, Venice (where he became the first American to win the Grand Prize at the Venice Biennale), Stockholm, and Tokyo. In each city, she tells us, Rauschenberg's work encountered both enthusiasm and resistance (which was often a reaction against American power). Ikegami's account offers a fresh, nonbinary perspective on the global and the local.

Hiroko Ikegami, an art historian who specializes in American art and the postwar globalization of the art world, is Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Intercultural Studies at Kobe University.

Reihe/Serie The MIT Press
Zusatzinfo 14 color illus., 68, b&w illus.; 82 Illustrations
Verlagsort Cambridge, Mass.
Sprache englisch
Maße 191 x 229 mm
Gewicht 826 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Kunstgeschichte / Kunststile
ISBN-10 0-262-52611-5 / 0262526115
ISBN-13 978-0-262-52611-1 / 9780262526111
Zustand Neuware
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