Witness : Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties
Accompanying a highly anticipated exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum, this
thoughtful catalog of brilliantly wide-ranging aesthetics explores the
complex relations between visual art and the fight for racial justice.
Taking as its occasion the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, the text moves away from rote historical narratives, instead
opting to focus on the role of the photographer in shaping action and
emergent discourses, of the influence of Ghana and Cuba on politics and
aesthetics, and of the tensions of politics in Pop art. These thoughtful
essays help guide what might otherwise be an overwhelming diversity of
images, including a David Hammons body print, an iconic poster by Emory
Douglas, Betye Saar assemblages, and Norman Rockwell paintings, among
many others. The images themselves, brought into conversation with one
another, are a valuable and resonant resource, allowing not only a
deeper understanding of art from the 1960s, but of the ongoing
historical reality of race in the United States. Publishers Weekly (02/24/2014)
Arts!
A selection of our new and noteworthy materials on the Performing Arts as well as other Fine Arts
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