Research Catalog

Intermedia

Title
Intermedia / edited by Ursula Frohne ; with an introduction by Rachael Z. DeLue, and essays by Anna Arabindan-Kesson, Maggie M. Cao, Sebastian Egenhofer, Eva Ehninger, Natilee Harren, Michelle Smiley.
Publication
Chicago : Terra Foundation for American Art, [2022]

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library NX180.S6 I576 2022Off-site

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Additional Authors
  • Frohne, Ursula
  • DeLue, Rachael Ziady
  • Arabindan-Kesson, Anna
  • Cao, Maggie M., 1983-
  • Egenhofer, Sebastian
  • Ehninger, Eva
  • Harren, Natilee
  • Smiley, Michelle
  • Terra Foundation for American Art, publisher.
Description
272 pages : illustrations (chiefly color); 24 cm.
Summary
"In 1965, the American artist and Fluxus cofounder Dick Higgins stated that much of the best art being made at the time fell between media. He linked the dismantling of divisions among media to decompartmentalization in society more generally and to the impending dawn of a "classless" society. After High Art, represented by the elite medium of painting, he wrote, came the deluge, brought on by Duchamp's ready-mades, Robert Rauschenberg's combines, and Alan Kaprow's happenings. Intermedia, the term Higgins selected to describe this trend, referred to works of art that conceptually fused different and, often, non-traditional media, rather than simply juxtaposing them, as with "mixed media" or "multimedia" art. In intermedia, boundaries between mediums dissolve and new mediums emerge. Visual poetry is a classic example of intermedia, as are Nam June Paik's video sculptures. Never a prescriptive term, intermedia remains fluid, both as an artistic practice and an art-historical category. It resists periodization, as well. Higgins associated intermedia with post-war art yet understood intermedia as a mode of making taken up by many cultures across time. Essays in the volume consider a range of subjects from the history of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American art and visual culture, exploring in detail and depth particular instances of intermedia within specific cultural, social, and historical contexts and in relation to both current and contemporaneous theorizations of media, image making, and materiality. Together, the essays present a rich and newly illuminating account of American artistic practice as an open and proliferating system of medial interrelation and exchange, highlighting the persistent and experimental cross-pollinations and transgenic mutations among painting, drawing, print, sculpture, photography, film, installation, performance, site specific work, and social practice in the art of the United States."--
Series Statement
Terra Foundation essays ; volume 6
Uniform Title
  • Intermedia (Terra Foundation for American Art)
  • Terra Foundation essays ; v. 6.
Subject
  • 1800-1999
  • Arts and society > United States > History > 19th century
  • Arts and society > United States > History > 20th century
  • Arts > Experimental methods
  • ART / American / General
  • ART / General
  • Arts and society
  • United States
  • Intermedia
Genre/Form
History.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references.
Contents
The circulating medium : Joseph Saxton, minting, and the American Daguerreotype / Michelle Smiley -- From poetry into paint : Robert S. Duncanson and the song of Hiawatha / Anna Arabindan-Kesson -- The readymade and the counterfeit : the material conditions of art and money / Maggie M. Cao -- Optics and humor : light, pictures, and subjectivity in the work of Dan Graham / Sebastian Egenhofer -- Visualizing the city : interrelations between painting and photography / Eva Ehninger -- Proposals for intermedia art education : Robert Watts' experimental workshop at the University of California, Santa Cruz, 1968-1969 / Natilee Harren.
ISBN
  • 9780932171702
  • 0932171702
LCCN
  • 2022030934
  • 99993746103
OCLC
  • on1336956351
  • 1336956351
  • SCSB-14509494
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries