Art, ethnography and the life of objects

Paris, c.1925–35

Julia Kelly


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Hardback
ISBN: 978-0-7190-6940-6
Series: Critical Perspectives in Art History
Subject Area: History
BIC Category: First World War
Published: February 2007
240 x 170 mm
192 pages
Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Description
  • Author
  • Contents
  • In the 1920s and 1930s, anthropology and ethnography provided new and striking ways of rethinking what art could be and the forms which it could take. This book examines the impact of these emergent disciplines on the artistic avant-garde in Paris. The reception by European artists of objects arriving from colonial territories in the first half of the twentieth century is generally understood through the artistic appropriation of the forms of African or Oceanic sculpture. The author reveals how anthropological approaches to this intriguing material began to affect the ways in which artists, theorists, critics and curators thought about three-dimensional objects and their changing status as 'art', 'artefacts' or 'ethnographic evidence'.

    This book analyses texts, photographs and art works that cross disciplinary boundaries, through case studies including the Dakar to Djibouti expedition of 1931–33, the Trocadéro Ethnographic Museum, and the two art periodicals Documents and Minotaure. Through its interdisciplinary and contextual approach, it provides an important corrective to histories of modern art and the European avant-garde.
    List of figures
    Acknowledgements
    Introduction
    1. Encountering: ethnography, art and the reception of non-western objects
    2. Classifying: the 'irritating' object and its disciplines
    3. Collecting: fieldwork and its discontents
    4. Mediating: ethnography through a lens and behind glass
    5. Making: technologies of the surrealist object
    Bibliography
    Julia Kelly is Lecturer in Art History and Visual Studies at the University of Manchester
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