Research Catalog

Lightning symbol and snake dance : Aby Warburg and Pueblo art

Title
Lightning symbol and snake dance : Aby Warburg and Pueblo art / edited by Christine Chávez, Uwe Fleckner ; with contributions by Bruce Bernstein, Christine Chávez, Lindsey Drury, Adam Duran, Uwe Fleckner, Rainer Hatoum, Kelley Hays-Gilpin, Lea S. McChesney, Nancy J. Parezo, Justin B. Richland, Erhard Schüttpelz, Sascha T. Scott, Matthew Vollgraff ; translations, Stefan Barmann, Burke Barrett, Volker Ellerbeck, Helen Ferguson, Ilze Müller, Jennifer Taylor.
Publication
  • Berlin : Hatje Cantz, [2022]
  • Trento, [Italy] : Printer Trento S.r.l.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library N5267.W37 L5413 2022gOff-site

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Details

Additional Authors
  • Chavez, Christine
  • Fleckner, Uwe
  • Bernstein, Bruce
  • Barmann, Stefan
  • Museum am Rothenbaum--Kulturen und Künste der Welt, host institution.
Description
368 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color maps, portraits, facsimiles; 30 cm
Summary
The legacy of the art and cultural scientist Aby Warburg offers many subjects for reassessment. Almost unknown until now are the artifacts he collected on a journey through the southwest of the US in 1895/96 and donated to the Museum für Völkerkunde in Hamburg (today Museum am Rothenbaum). The results first unfolded in Warburg's famous lecture on the snake ritual of the Hopi (1923). Following Warburg's transdisciplinary approach, this publication examines his guiding principles in assembling his collection as well as his reading of Pueblo art and culture. It pays tribute to the works and their artistic significance and sheds light on the circumstances of acquisition in the sociopolitical environment of the Pueblo communities of the time. The contemporary fascination with the snake ritual is also a topic. Set against this are the previously neglected perspectives and strategies of Pueblo leaders to regain interpretive sovereignty over culturally sensitive content and imagery. Aby Warburg (1866-1929) is considered as the founder of a modern art history oriented towards cultural studies. His research was mainly concerned with the investigation of the afterlife of antiquity in the Renaissance, which he recorded in his iconic Bilderatlas Mnemosyne. Exhibition: Museum am Rothenbaum. Kulturen und Künste der Welt (MARKK), Hamburg, Germany (04.03.20222 - 08.01.2023).
Alternative Title
Aby Warburg and Pueblo art
Subject
  • Warburg, Aby, 1866-1929 > Art collections > Exhibitions
  • Warburg, Aby, 1866-1929
  • Pueblo art > Private collections > Exhibitions
  • Art > Collectors and collecting > Exhibitions
  • Snake dance > Exhibitions
  • Art pueblo > Histoire
  • Art > Collectionneurs et collections
  • Danse du serpent
  • Art > Collectors and collecting
  • Art > Private collections
  • Pueblo art
  • Snake dance
Genre/Form
  • History.
  • Exhibition catalogs.
Note
  • Translators' statement of responsibility from page 368.
  • Some "Sensitive artifacts" are described without depiction, but are alloted pages with blank footprints of the omitted images (pages 231-239).
  • "Glossary": pages 351-353.
  • The twelve essays are interspersed among fourteen thematic "Catalogue" sections.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references.
Exhibitions (note)
  • Published to accompany the exhibition of the same name held at Musuem am Rothenbaum--Kulturen und Künste der Welt (MARKK), Hamburg, March 4, 2022-January 8, 2023.
Contents
(from table of contents) Foreword / Bill Sherman -- Preface / Barbara Plankensteiner -- Editorial note / Christine Chávez, Uwe Fleckner -- Essays -- Catalogue.
Call Number
N5267.W37
ISBN
  • 9783775752022
  • 3775752021
OCLC
  • on1286958292
  • 1286958292
  • SCSB-14360328
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries