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Art and the city: The transformation of civic culture in Los Angeles, 1900--1965 (California).

机译:艺术与城市:1900--1965年(加利福尼亚州)洛杉矶市民文化的变革。

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摘要

Unlike other metropolitan centers, Los Angeles has been perceived by critics as artistically underdeveloped and lacking in high culture, creative communities, and public art. An examination of Los Angeles' civic culture from 1900 to 1965, however, reveals that art has long been a volatile site for public debate over what kind of city Los Angeles would be and who would be represented in it. Rather than a dearth of civic art, Los Angeles hosts a rich history of creative representation from communities as diverse as elite urban boosters to minority muralists.; In the early twentieth century, anxiety about Los Angeles' status relative to other American cities, the rise of mass culture, and the increasing number of non-white residents prompted the city's elite and middle-class to advance their own vision of a unified civic culture—a vision that focused on the promotion of high art while obscuring a regional legacy of conquest and racial inequity. This notion of civic culture excluded many Angelenos. In response, artists from diverse ethnic communities and political backgrounds sought alternative forums for cultural expression and civic participation, painting themselves back onto the urban landscape through public protest and unofficial forms of artistic expression.; This assertion is illustrated by an examination of urban sites where divergent communities struggled over public art. These include 1920s elite art clubs, 1930s murals, 1950s outdoor art festivals, bohemian art scenes and the Watts Towers, a contested civic symbol after the riots of 1965. Struggles between liberal politicians, artists, conservative city councilmen, and business interests undermined a democratic art program imagined by the Municipal Art Department and contributed to the emergence of an exclusive corporate civic culture. Yet, the same struggles gave rise to a visual culture of urban protest still present today. Renegade murals, cooperative art galleries, beatnik coffeehouses, and outsider art, while not civic culture in the traditional sense of publicly funded institutions, represented an imagined urban landscape for divergent communities who shared a city's name but not access to its spaces, wealth, or political resources.
机译:与其他大都会中心不同,评论家认为洛杉矶在艺术上不发达,缺乏高级文化,创意社区和公共艺术。然而,对1900年至1965年洛杉矶文化的考察表明,长期以来,艺术一直是公众争论不休的场所,人们对于洛杉矶将成为什么样的城市以及其中将代表谁进行了辩论。洛杉矶没有缺乏公民艺术,而是拥有丰富的创意代表历史,其代表社区从精英城市拥护者到少数族裔村民。在20世纪初期,人们对洛杉矶相对于其他美国城市的地位感到焦虑,大众文化的兴起以及非白人居民的增多,促使该市的精英阶层和中产阶级提出了自己的统一公民愿景。文化-一种愿景,着眼于促进高级艺术,同时掩盖了征服和种族不平等的地区传统。公民文化的概念排除了许多安杰列诺斯。作为回应,来自不同种族社区和政治背景的艺术家寻求文化表达和公民参与的替代论坛,通过公众抗议和非官方形式的艺术表达将自己重画在城市景观上。通过考察城市社区中各种社区为公共艺术而奋斗的地点,可以证明这一主张。其中包括1920年代的精英艺术俱乐部,1930年代的壁画,1950年代的户外艺术节,波西米亚艺术场景和瓦茨塔,瓦茨塔是1965年骚乱后备受争议的公民标志。市政艺术部门构想的艺术计划,促成了独特的企业公民文化的出现。然而,同样的斗争引起了今天仍然存在的城市抗议的视觉文化。叛徒的壁画,合作艺术画廊,beatnik咖啡屋和外部人的艺术品,虽然不是传统意义上的由公共资助机构提供的公民文化,却代表了一个异想天开的城市景观,这些社区共享一个城市的名称,但无法使用其空间,财富或政治资源。

著录项

  • 作者

    Schrank, Sarah Louise.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, San Diego.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, San Diego.;
  • 学科 History United States.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2002
  • 页码 362 p.
  • 总页数 362
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 美洲史;
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:46:17

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