Dickerman urges against defning abstraction in terms of forward
progress... less interested in the invention of abstraction than
abstraction as invention. The main impact of this horizontalist
approach is geographic, bringing peripheral sites into focus
without denying the importance of major hubs.--Daniel Marcus "Art
in America"
Featuring twenty-four contributors, this MoMA catalogue explores
the evolution of early modernist abstraction across various
mediums, countries and movements.--Arne Glimcher "Art in
America"
Three quarters of a century after Alfred Barr, founding director of
New York's Museum of Modern Art, mounted the landmark 1936
exhibition Cubism and Abtract Art, MoMA curator Dickerman returns
to the realm with a vast exhibition and comprehensive catalogue
depicting the incipient stages of abtraction in the plastic arts.
Situating the movement from a representation toward abstraction as
a synchronic historical moment, as well as one of modernism's
principal activities, this Eurocentric organizational feat
elaborates a network based on cross talk, spontaneity, and
simultaneous development. The front endpapers of the catalogue
offer a graphic spread that plays off Barr's legendary chart - the
cover to his exhibition's catalogue - acanonical lineage of
begotten isms. Dickerman's updated diagram turns reader's view to a
distributed web of networks and memes in an endeavor that
highlights connectivity over paternity. Even with his intended
catholic aopproach, painting and the two - dimensional flattened
spatial constructs of pictorial space overwhelmingly predominate.
Music is accorded a seminal role; sculpture and film are
underrepresented; typographic space and artists' books are
thankfully recognized. A terrific collection of diverse short
essays by nearly 30 scholars complement this intelligently edited,
well- illustrated, and indispensable resource.--E. Baden "Choice"
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