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E-raamat: Unfinished Business of Unsettled Things: Art from an African American South

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-May-2022
  • Kirjastus: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9798890863324
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 38,99 €*
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-May-2022
  • Kirjastus: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9798890863324

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"This book invites readers into a growing, dynamic conversation among scholars and critics around a vibrant community of artists from an African American South. This constellation of creative makers includes familiar figures, such as Thornton Dial Sr., Lonnie Holley, and quiltmakers Nettie Young and Mary Lee Bendolph, whose work is collected in major museum and private collections. The artists represented extend to lesser-known but equally compelling creators working across a wide range of artistic forms, themes, and geographies"--

This book invites readers into a growing, dynamic conversation among scholars and critics around a vibrant community of artists from an African American South. This constellation of creative makers includes familiar figures, such as Thornton Dial Sr., Lonnie Holley, and quiltmakers Nettie Young and Mary Lee Bendolph, whose work is collected in major museum and private collections. The artists represented extend to lesser-known but equally compelling creators working across a wide range of artistic forms, themes, and geographies. The essays gathered here, accompanied by a generous selection of full-color plates, survey subjects such as the artists' engagement with enslavement and liberation, the spiritual and religious dimensions of their work, the technical aspects of their work (such as the common use of "assemblage" as an artistic medium), the links between art and biography, and the evolving status of their reception in narratives of contemporary, modern, southern, and American art.

Contributors are Celeste-Marie Bernier, Laura Bickford, Michael J. Bramwell, Elijah Heyward III, Sharon P. Holland, and Pamela J. Sachant.

Introduction: The Unfinished Business of Unsettled Things
Art from an African American South
1(30)
Bernard L. Herman
Put Honey in the Sky Where It Could Drip and Make the World Sweet: Looking for Purvis Young and Thomas Samuel Doyle, but Seeing Something Else: Meditations on the Matter of Black Freedom
31(24)
Sharon P. Holland
Had to Learn Surviving: Imaging Slavery and Imagining Freedom in "Black Lexicons of Liberation"
55(36)
Celeste-Marie Bernier
Heard a Voice, Saw a Light: Spiritual Implications of Creative Belief in Black Vernacular Art
91(16)
Michael J. Bramwell
When Everything Stands Still, That's When the Griot Spirit Come On: History-Making and Assemblage in the African American South
107(24)
Laura Bickford
Biography--Writing Lives: Art--Viewing Lives
131(24)
Pamela J. Sachant
The South Has Always Had Something to Say
155(18)
Elijah Heyward
Acknowledgments 173(4)
Notes 177(18)
Contributors 195(2)
Index 197
Bernard L. Herman is George B. Tindall Distinguished Professor of Southern Studies and Folklore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.