Yep, I'm scheduled to deliver an arts lecture next week for the Humanities Honors program, and I'm wrapping up my preparations to cover a massive array of material. My topic: the 20th Century's transition from modern to postmodern art. Even though I'm on sabbatical, I couldn't pass up the opportunity to play with this topic (as a "guest lecturer," I guess). Here's my summary:
The 20th Century marks the decline of the modern project – an “Age of Confidence” in humankind’s ability (and desire) to produce a rational world through the management of irrational forces. This lecture examines 20 significant examples of visual art, industrial design, and architectural innovation that reveal a spiraling dialectic of order and disorder as technological triumph gives way to existential angst. As a romantic rhetoric of “authentic self” withers from view, first beneath the totalizing power of the state and later amid the corporate pleasures of consumer identity, we read the 20th Century as a period of transformation whose implications have yielded the frustrations, ambiguities, and potentially radical freedoms of our own lives.Knowing that I'm breezing past many, many memorable artists and schools of thought (Where are Diego Rivera's murals? How could you skip Frida Kahlo? What about the Color Field wing? The list goes on...) I'm limiting myself to the following pieces (in order of presentation):
Pablo Picasso (1907) Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
Henri Matisse (1905-6) Le Bonheur de Vivre
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1913) Berlin Street Scene
Wassily Kandinsky (1912) Improvisation 28 (second version)
Marcel Duchamp (1912) Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2
Umberto Boccioni (1913) Unique Forms of Continuity in Space
Marcel Duchamp (1917/1964) Fountain (I'll use my own photo)
Giorgio de Chirico (1914) Mystery and Melancholy of a Street
Frank Lloyd Wright (1935) Fallingwater
Piet Mondrian (1929-30) Fox Trot A: Lozenge Composition with Three Lines
Edward Hopper (1942) Nighthawks
Walter Gropius (1925-26) Bauhaus, Dessau
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1929) Barcelona Chair
Pablo Picasso (1937) Guernica
O. Winston Link (1956) Hotshot Eastbound
Robert V. Derrah (1937) Coca-Cola Bottling Co. building (I'll use my own photo)
Roy Lichtenstein (1964) Oh Jeff… I Love You, Too… But…
Andy Warhol (1962) Twenty-five Colored Marilyns
Frank Gehry and Vlado Milunić (1992-1996) Nationale-Nederlanden building
Actually I'll delve deeply into only about a dozen of these pieces, using others to connect broad themes. Even so, there's every possibility that my dream of a tight lecture will erupt into a hot mess. Such is life, an irresistible challenge.
1 comment:
I would love to get a copy of your lecture when it is complete.
Post a Comment