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World Famous Comics: Art Since 1940: Strategies of Being
Art Since 1940: Strategies of Being
By: Jonathan Fineberg, Jonathan Fine
Average Rating:3.00 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Hardcover
Format: Bargain Price
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 496
Publication Date: 1995-04

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Art Since 1940: Strategies of Being
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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
This comprehensive and authoritative book illustrates art from the 1940's and stresses the individuality of the artists in relation to their political, social, and cultural contexts. The book focuses on the meaning of the major works and innovations. It features nearly 600 illustrations (approximately half in color) representing art since 1940, both in Europe and America. It explores the full range of periods, artists, and movements: New York in the Forties; Calder, Hofmann, Gorky, Motherwell, De Kooning; Existentialism (Pollock, Newman, Rothko, David Smith); The New European Masters of the Late Forties (Dubuffet, Giacometti, Bacon), plus so much more. For anyone interested in Postwar Art.


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:3.00 out of 5.00 stars

4 out of 5 starsExcellent book
As contemporary art history textbooks go, this is an excellent one. It is very typical for twentieth-century art history to be divided into two courses (divided at WWII), and this is a useful place to begin studying post-war art. It is very informative, it presents a broad range of artists, and it articulately and concisely teases out some of the most important issues in contemporary art-making.

I disagree with previous reviewers on a couple points:
1. This book is quite readable. Anyone who has read any contemporary art theory/history (I have read a lot of it) knows how obnoxious and opaque the jargon can be. Fineberg does a good job of introducing some difficult ideas without resorting to jargon: he writes clearly and with the intention to communicate. This book will work well, even if you haven't studied art before.
2. There is no need for this book to include design, comics, advertising, etc. The suggestion that Fineberg should have included "Ansel Adams, Walt Disney, Gottfried Helnwein, H.R. Giger, Dr. Suess, and Playboy magazine" betrays a total misunderstanding of what is meant by 'contemporary art'. I think that books do need to be written about those subjects, but to demand that this one include them doesn't make sense.

There are a few problems with this book:
1. I do agree with a previous reviewer that there is a paucity of photography. Photo has played a significant role in contemporary art discourse, and it is very underrepresented in this book. This leaves a conceptual gap in the train-of-thought.
2. I question the amount of space that Fineberg devotes to some artists. For instance, he devotes 8 pages to Alice Aycock (who, quite frankly, is not a significant presence in contemporary discourse), whereas Ann Hamilton only gets a page and a half; John Baldessari gets 3 paragraphs; and Peter Halley gets 1 sentence. I would have made some different choices, but hey, this an introductory survey book--he can't do justice to everyone and we should give him leeway in that respect.



5 out of 5 starsIlluminating Book
I used this book when I was a student and have referred to it multiple times since I graduated. Simply said, I love it. It presents the work of artists of the major movements in a clear way, without the jargon that is so common in other art books. I would recommend it for anyone interested in modern and contemporary art or anyone who has been to a museum of modern art and not understood what they are looking at. It is also a great affirmation to all of us working in creative fields that there are actual people producing this work, and Fineberg beautifully illuminates these personalities.



1 out of 5 starsEwwww.......
Let me start off by saying that I'm not a fan of contemporary art. That being said, this book is incredibly difficult to read. For me, each sentence took several re-reads before I could get some type of clue as to what he was trying to say. I consider myself a good reader and this book was way out there with the uppity language. My husband would get a kick out of me reading sentences to him, just because they were impossible to understand. If you like this sort of thing, then you might like the book. I, however, did not like the book. I also did not like how they would describe a work of art in great detail, yet show you a totally different piece from that artist. It made if difficult to visually see what they were talking about. My professor did a much better job explaining the material covered in this book.



2 out of 5 starsNo Photography!
By this book, 1940 marked the time that photography died and was replaced by vast amounts of performance art. Can you seriously present a "survey" of contemporary art without even acknowledging photography in any form?



2 out of 5 starsBad Religion
This book by Finberg is professionally written, edited, and with lots of high quality color examples of the art being discussed. It covers a wide range of individual artists and art movements from the 1940's onward. The problem with book is that the range is not wide enough. Fienberg doesn't give equal treatment to art forms, and the visual arts even begin to take a backseat to performances and installations. It can be argued that new genres of art have emerged and should be discussed, but certainly not at the expense of other forms in a book presented as "art since the 1940's". There is a lot of art since the 1940's that isn't mentioned, though it should be, either because of significant cultural impact, or because of influence on artists that are discussed in the book. For example, there is no mention of animation of any kind, and relatively little coverage of realism, figurative work, design, comics, or advertising. Whether certain people like it or not, Ansel Adams, Walt Disney, Gottfried Helnwein, H.R. Giger, Dr. Suess, and Playboy magazine have had a major impact and more worldwide recognition than virtually all of the artists Fineberg discusses. While some may cast these off as unworthy of discussion in a book about "high art", knowledge of the evolution and integration of the "low arts" is essential to understand concepts of "pop art", "appropriation", "feminist art", and "post modernism". Fineberg's tone is celebratory with certain artists more than others, and makes odd choices on which artists to give the most attention to. The reason I titled this review "bad religion" is because this book is like a sermon about art by someone who is presenting their own doctrine, rather than telling the whole story. If you read this hoping to be educated about art, you are out of luck, unless your goal is to sound intellectual while sipping wine at the opening reception of the next retrospective show of minimalist art in Los Angeles, New York, or Chicago. Oh, it might also be useful if you are writing a paper for an art history class...


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