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Showing posts with label Literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Literature. Show all posts

Sunday, February 20, 2011

SEEING is believing



Seeing High & Low: Representing Social Conflict in American Visual Culture
Patricia Johnston. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 2006

One of the challenges facing art education today is the ever growing push towards the incorporation of a visual studies curriculum in K-12 classrooms. Seeing High & Low: Representing Social Conflict in American Visual Culture explores the separation of art mediums as well as their historical roles as a vehicle for social change. Through an array of essays by various authors, Seeing High & Low attempts to examine visual culture as it relates to American art genres. Advocates for a Visual Culture Art Education curriculum could use this collaborative project as further evidence that art, in its truest form, can be used to represent a plethora of cultural philosophies, iconic imagery, and contemporary ideals.

In her introduction, Art History Professor Patricia Johnston argues that the separation of art into contexts of “high” and “low” have historically been used by art museums, art schools, and art historians to reinforce the dominant positions of elitism and modernism. These contexts divide society by class, race, sex, and religion. Seeing High & Low reviews the instabilities of these ideologies by focusing on famous works of art, their historical importance, and their implications on popular genre conventions. The authors systematically accomplish their goals by illustrating how popular culture influences art movements as well as its ability to confront historical and contemporary political tensions.     

            The fifteen contributing authors are a combined group of university professors, art historians, and creative directors. Their analytical approaches are used to construct correlations between art genres and social values. Most notable, and used in this review, are essays by Regina Lee Blaszczyk, Jeffrey Belnap, Melissa Dabakis, and Katharine Martinez. Each author evaluates the imagery used in various mediums to addresses social and cultural issues. Their conclusions substantiate art’s ability to cultivate dialogue, create representation, and promote self awareness. These arguments are equivalent with the aspirations of VCAE advocates. This review will briefly examine the essays of the above mentioned authors.

Lee Blaszczyk persuasively examines the reciprocal relationship that occurs between art and commercialism in “The Color of Modernism: Georgia O’Keeffe, Cheney Brothers, and the Relationship between Art and Industry in the 1920’s”. Blaszczyk argues that in 1926 the colorful and feminine work of Georgia O’Keeffe’s was successfully used by the Cheney brothers to invigorate their failing silk profits. Not only did this strategy set the Cheney brothers apart from their competitors, it also raised public awareness and recognition of O’Keeffe as a female artist; an accomplishment that would set the trend for art and commercial industry in the years to come. In this essay, Blaszczyk’s research analyzes art's ability to move fluidly from the context of fine art to popular culture.

Similar to Blaszczyk, Jeffrey Belnap examines the tradition of Mexican muralists in his essay, “Caricaturing the Gringo Tourist: Diego Rivera’s Folkloric and Touristic Mexico and Miguel Covarrubias’s Sunday Afternoon in Xochimilco”. Most notably, Belnap points out the subtle ways in which muralists called attention to the effects of U.S. capitalism on Mexican culture. Belnap critically reviews lesser known works by Rivera and Covarrubias to call attention to the differences between the viewer and those being viewed. The murals explore the nature of resistance towards the U.S. and Mexico’s ruling class as well as politicize social inequalities experienced in Mexico and abroad. Belnap’s essay reinforces the link between representation and culture in art as well as its ability to educate others globally.

In “Ain’t I A Woman? Anne Witney, Edmonia Lewis, and the Iconography of Emancipation,” Melissa Dabakis examines the plight of female artists who would not conform to Western aesthetics in the 19th century. This essay discusses the negation of sculpture that fell outside of the canon of high art. Unprecedented in the art world, Whitney and Lewis attempted to create images that redefined their race as well as question the institution of slavery. Dabakis concludes that the lack of representation hindered the success and acceptance of sculpture that did not reinforce Western stereotypical images. Just as VCAE calls attention to the need for varied forms of otherness and representation in art education, so does Dabakis.

Katharine Martinez contributes “At Home with Mona Lisa: Consumers and Commercial Visual Culture, 1880-1920”. Martinez contends that for most people at the end of the 19th century, visual culture was still a relatively new experience, despite the widening availability of lithographs and chromolithographs that had begun earlier in the century.[1] She critically examines the desire of upper class patrons to “enlighten” and “educate” the lower masses with fine art in hopes that it would improve their impoverished lives. The same argument continues today regarding the introduction of visual culture in art education.

In conclusion, Seeing High & Low: Representing Social Conflict in American Visual Culture is a collection of essays that examine the effects of popular culture on fine art. These essays provide convincing theories because they cover various art genres and are written as an exploration of representation and identity. I believe Johnston has successfully incorporated different voices, viewpoints, and art authorities into a compilation that reflects the changing trends surrounding the current state of art education. The lines between high and low art have blurred into a combination of popular culture in Postmodernism. This book is evidence that there is no longer one concise voice on what should and should not be considered art. It encourages educators to engage their students with their culture, historical legacies, and the world around them in a way that only art can do in the 21st century. 

Reviewed by Angela Singletary, Art Graduate Student, University of Florida.


[1] Martinez, Katharine. “At Home With Mona Lisa: Consumers and Commercial Culture, 1880-1920,” 160-176.

Monday, December 6, 2010

time to pass GO



I've been pretty busy these past few weeks so forgive me, I haven't had much time to update my blog with movies, fashion and literature. I'm trying my hardest to get my thoughts out there before I drift off into never never land so today I figured I'd blog a little about me. What about me is so important you ask? Well, I'm a writer and I sincerely admire that fact about me. It's a hard art to cultivate but as I look back on my old high school journals to my current entries, I'm impressed with the tremendous growth I've accomplished. Life really is all about moving forward so perhaps in 5 years I'll look at this entry and feel even more motivated to finally finish my 3rd (unfinished) novel. I wrote this poem recently and since I've been forced to stretch and bend outside of my normal passive routine, I thought why not. So here it is, Poem 8:15/9:37:

8:15/9:37

DO NOT PASS GO
I keep hearing it
Like a beautiful metaphor
Reminiscent of my childhood demons
Quiet and acquiescent
Yet always
Refusing my right
To grow

My reluctance
Not to pass
Has suffocated
My inner Ángel
At the most inopportune times
Leaving her twisted and torn
Bruised
And forlorn
This unwillingness
To move on
Has transformed
Morphed
And become
My marathon
Mi carrera
Mi lucha
My triathlon

I want to
I need to
I have to
Passing GO
Is all that I know
How
To
Do

DO NOT PASS GO…
It is whispered amongst the shadows
Proudly proclaiming my name
Haunting my dreams
And wrapping its legs around
My fantasies
But like all childhood demons
It’s time I said good-bye
Because
The woman
That stares back at me now
Is finally ready
To
Kiss
The sky…

Genez

Okay, so let's break this down. My first thought when writing this piece was of my childhood memories playing Monopoly. It's everybody's goal to pass GO, collect $200 and perhaps acquire a nice piece of real estate on Boardwalk or Park Place. Throw up some hotels, charge heavily for staying there, live happily ever after and win the game. As children, it's never impossible to become who you want to be but along the way all kinds of detours pop up. Once you venture into the real world, you're told to STOP. Stop dreaming, stop imagining, stop believing and most importantly, stop being YOU. Like Monopoly, you're penalized for wanting anything more than the crappy little places adjacent to Baltic Avenue. But, the little girl inside of me, Genez, wants to break out of those confined boundaries and accomplish something that no one has ever done before. She wants to be a legend but she often becomes paralyzed because of the messages she's collected along the way. Part of me is screaming for freedom, the other part often finds comfort in complacency. Throughout the years this imbalance has been tried and tested by situations where my growth is not only necessary, it is mandatory. This poem is all about fighting against the constraints because, after all, Park Place is obtainable. As the poem ends, it is a stark reminder that anything is possible. After all, "the woman that stares back at me is finally ready to kiss the sky". Enjoy!

Monday, October 11, 2010

literature worth EATING


These days I'm enamored with everything Asian and as bell hooks would say, I'm thoroughly content on 'eating the other'. My current read for the moment is Pai Kit Fai's first novel, The Concubine's Daughter (2009). It's 471 pages filled with the courage and determination of Li-Xia  (Beautiful One) and I must admit I'm finding this book hard to put down. In brilliant detail, Fai recounts the heroism of Li-Xia as she rages against the confines of concubinage in an effort to free herself as well as the life of her daughter Siu-Sing (Little Star). Filled with insight and encouragement, it's a heart stirring reminder that one's mind almost always determines their situation in life.
Protect the secrets of your heart as others may protect the jewels and riches of a kingdom, share them only with those deserving of your trust. Do not allow your expectations to rise above your reach, but let no one set a limit to your hopes and dreams.
With lines like that, I can't help but wonder if there will be a film version someday. The Concubine's Daughter definitely gets 5 stars from me.