Kirk Varnedoe on Abstract Art, 1950s-2000s, Part 1
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.ย. 2024
- In this first lecture, originally delivered at the National Gallery of Art on March 30, 2003, the distinguished art historian Kirk Varnedoe begins with Jackson Pollock at a key moment in the emergence of a new form of abstract art in the mid-1950s. Building on Ernst Gombrich's Mellon Lectures of 1956, Varnedoe begins by asking: Can there be a philosophy of abstract art as compelling as Gombrich's argument for illusionism? What is abstract art good for? And finally, what do we get out of abstract art?
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This is the best video series on this topic that I have found on youtube or anywhere and it has less than 3000 views! Been searching for something like this and it took a year to stumble across. Thank you for posting this!
A great lecture.I can wait to listen the next lectures. Sure, I'll learn a lot from them. Thanks a lot.
The philosophy? Discover and work with new possibilities within, and springing from, your basic discipline. Simple. No agonizing required. And such is available to all practitioners. Waking up required.
Really interesting lecture. It would be helpful to list the year it was recorded in the title - I assume this was in the early 2000’s. what is discussed is certainly still relevant today. Thank you
It was 2003