Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Postwar Revisited
View through CrossRef
Okwui Enwezor's 2016 exhibition Postwar: Art between the Pacific and the Atlantic, 1945–1965 redefined the history of art produced in those two decades. Nearly a decade later, Postwar Revisited returns to these debates to present an image of a historical period in which Western conceptions of art, aesthetics, and philosophy are all thrown into intense flux after Auschwitz and Hiroshima, while the cultural energies of decolonization generate myriad artistic and intellectual practices across the globe, which re-engage the connections of art to life itself. Focusing on modernist artists, artist collectives, and architects central to dissonant regional traditions, as well as influential exhibitions and patronage systems, the contributors produce a new understanding of emergent postwar global art. Provoking new ways of thinking, engaging, and narrating art history, Postwar Revisited is essential reading for those interested in debates on global art history and global modernism, the intersections between art and decolonization, the cultural aspects of the Cold War and the Non-Aligned Movement, and modern and contemporary art more generally.
Duke University Press
Title: Postwar Revisited
Description:
Okwui Enwezor's 2016 exhibition Postwar: Art between the Pacific and the Atlantic, 1945–1965 redefined the history of art produced in those two decades.
Nearly a decade later, Postwar Revisited returns to these debates to present an image of a historical period in which Western conceptions of art, aesthetics, and philosophy are all thrown into intense flux after Auschwitz and Hiroshima, while the cultural energies of decolonization generate myriad artistic and intellectual practices across the globe, which re-engage the connections of art to life itself.
Focusing on modernist artists, artist collectives, and architects central to dissonant regional traditions, as well as influential exhibitions and patronage systems, the contributors produce a new understanding of emergent postwar global art.
Provoking new ways of thinking, engaging, and narrating art history, Postwar Revisited is essential reading for those interested in debates on global art history and global modernism, the intersections between art and decolonization, the cultural aspects of the Cold War and the Non-Aligned Movement, and modern and contemporary art more generally.
Related Results
Postwar Italian Journeys: Narratives of Homecoming, National Cohesion and German–Italian Friendship
Postwar Italian Journeys: Narratives of Homecoming, National Cohesion and German–Italian Friendship
Abstract
Scholars, journalists, diplomats and even archivists routinely assert that to understand German–Italian relations one must start with Goethe. Without denyin...
Operational Media: Cybernetics, Biopolitics and Postwar Education
Operational Media: Cybernetics, Biopolitics and Postwar Education
This article develops the concept of «operational media» to think through the deployment of utility/useful cinema in the context of cybernetically informed educational policy. The ...
Architecture and the Memory of Nazism in Postwar Munich
Architecture and the Memory of Nazism in Postwar Munich
Few issues have possessed the centrality or sparked as much controversyin the postwar history of the Federal Republic of Germany(FRG) as the struggle to come to terms with the nati...
The Crowding of Dreams: Postwar Time and Experimentalism
The Crowding of Dreams: Postwar Time and Experimentalism
This chapter considers the importance of dream to Anna Kavan’s postwar writing, and the psychoanalytical and existential inflections in two of her postwar novels, Sleep Has His Hou...
Partners for Democracy
Partners for Democracy
Abstract
This book demonstrates that Japan's postwar Constitution has provided a solid foundation for democracy because, contrary to the conventional view that the A...
Antisemitism, Christian Ambivalence, and the Holocaust
Antisemitism, Christian Ambivalence, and the Holocaust
The twelve essays comprising this volume originated with a two-week workshop sponsored by the Center for Advanced Historical Studies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum ...
Postwar Identity in the Making: Hidden Children in Volos (Greece)
Postwar Identity in the Making: Hidden Children in Volos (Greece)
The high percentage of Jewish Holocaust survivors from Volos, compared to the devastating death rate in the rest of Greece, makes the city a case of its own. Scholars have analysed...
Colorless Festivals—An Examination of Yasuo Kuniyoshi’s Two Postwar Lithographs
Colorless Festivals—An Examination of Yasuo Kuniyoshi’s Two Postwar Lithographs
As a key figure among Japanese American artists, Yasuo Kuniyoshi attracted scholarly attention for his melancholic paintings produced during and shortly after the Second World War....

