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The 'Britishness' of British art: Landscape, art and identity, 1951--1956.

机译:英国艺术的“英国性”:风景,艺术和身份,1951--1956年。

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摘要

This study investigates how the production and discussion of landscape art in Britain during the period 1951–1956 can be related to the larger issue of nationalism during the Cold War era. These five years represented a transitional period in British social and political history; a term announced by the post-war civic optimism of the Festival of Britain and concluded by the governmental instability resulting from the Suez Crisis. Throughout the Second World War, and immediately afterwards, the Neo-Romantic landscape art of artists such as John Minton, Paul Nash and John Piper was celebrated as an established symbol of Britishness, while the national topography itself was viewed nostalgically as the hallowed ground of Shakespeare's “sceptre'd isle”. By the mid-1950s, however, the threat of atomic war had raised doubts as to even the probability of a future, and the old narratives of a timeless and inviolable land were shaken in a very physical sense. At the same time, the influence of American art and culture, the expanding global media and the new frontiers of science opened up fresh possibilities that challenged the isolationist preservation of an indigenous culture.; This dissertation examines the changing status of landscape art in the early 1950s through the examination of works that represented Britain at the Festival of Britain, the Venice Biennale and the Ten Years of English Landscape Painting exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts. The impact of developments in scientific technology on artist's perceptions of the environment is investigated through the Growth and Form exhibition, held at the ICA in 1951, and through an evaluation of the spiral paintings of Victor Pasmore. The works of Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, Francis Newton Souza, John Minton and Derrick Greaves are explored to show the ways that paintings, photographs and sculpture not only contributed to the discourse of collective identity but acted in the perpetuation of social divisions of gender, race and class; while the canvases of Graham Sutherland, L. S. Lowry, and Peter Lanyon reveal representations of landscape in the 1950s to be sites of anxiety, rather than security, concerning national, political and regional identity.
机译:这项研究调查了1951年至1956年间英国景观艺术的产生和讨论如何与冷战时期更大的民族主义问题相关联。这五年代表了英国社会和政治历史的过渡时期。此词由战后英国文化节的公民乐观主义宣布,并因苏伊士危机导致的政府不稳定而结束。在第二次世界大战期间以及之后不久,约翰·明顿,保罗·纳什和约翰·派珀等艺术家的新浪漫主义景观艺术被庆祝为英国的既定象征,而国家地貌本身被怀旧地视为英国的神圣土地。莎士比亚的“权杖岛”。然而,到了1950年代中期,原子战的威胁甚至使人们对未来的可能性产生了怀疑,而对于永恒和不可侵犯的土地的古老叙述在非常物理的意义上动摇了。同时,美国艺术和文化的影响,不断扩大的全球媒体和科学的新领域开辟了新的可能性,挑战了孤立主义对土著文化的保护。本论文通过考察代表英国参加英国艺术节,威尼斯双年展和英国国际艺术研究所十年展览的“斜体”展览,考察了风景艺术在1950年代初的变化状况。当代艺术。通过1951年在ICA举办的 Growth and Form 展览,并通过评估Victor Pasmore的螺旋画,研究了科学技术的发展对艺术家对环境的感知的影响。探索芭芭拉·赫普沃斯(Barbara Hepworth),亨利·摩尔(Henry Moore),弗朗西斯·牛顿·苏扎(Francis Newton Souza),约翰·明顿(John Minton)和德里克·格里夫斯(Derrick Greaves)的作品,以展示绘画,照片和雕塑不仅有助于集体认同的话语,而且还可以使性别的社会分化永久化,种族和阶级;格雷厄姆·萨瑟兰(Graham Sutherland),洛·洛里(L. S. Lowry)和彼得·拉永(Peter Lanyon)的画布揭示了1950年代的景观表现形式是关于国家,政治和地区认同的焦虑而非安全的场所。

著录项

  • 作者

    Jolivette, Catherine.;

  • 作者单位

    The Pennsylvania State University.;

  • 授予单位 The Pennsylvania State University.;
  • 学科 Art History.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2003
  • 页码 274 p.
  • 总页数 274
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 艺术史、艺术思想史;
  • 关键词

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