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E-raamat: Whole Picture: The colonial story of the art in our museums & why we need to talk about it

4.22/5 (2205 hinnangut Goodreads-ist)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Mar-2020
  • Kirjastus: Cassell
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788402217
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 3,99 €*
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If you think art history has to be pale, male and stale - think again.

Should museums be made to give back their marbles? Is it even possible to 'decolonise' our galleries? Must Rhodes fall?

From the stolen Wakandan art in Black Panther, to Emmanuel Macron's recent commitment to art restitution, and Beyoncé and Jay Z's provocative music video filmed in the Louvre, the question of decolonising our relationship with the art around us is quickly gaining traction. People are waking up to the seedy history of the world's art collections, and are starting to ask difficult questions about what the future of museums should look like.

In The Whole Picture, art historian and Uncomfortable Art Tour guide Alice Procter provides a manual for deconstructing everything you thought you knew about art, and fills in the blanks with the stories that have been left out of the art history canon for centuries.

The book is divided into four chronological sections, named after four different kinds of art space:
The Palace
The Classroom
The Memorial
The Playground


Each section tackles the fascinating and often shocking stories of five different art pieces, including the propaganda painting that the East India Company used to justify its control in India; the Maori mokomokai skulls that were traded and collected by Europeans as 'art objects'; and Kara Walker's controversial contemporary sculpture A Subtlety, which raised questions about 'appropriate' interactions with art. Through these stories, Alice brings out the underlying colonial narrative lurking beneath the art industry today, and suggests different ways of seeing and thinking about art in the modern world.

The Whole Picture  is a much-needed provocation to look more critically at the accepted narratives about art, and rethink and disrupt the way we interact with the museums and galleries that display it.
Introduction 8(12)
Part I The Palace
20(52)
1 Vases & Attitudes
27(9)
2 The Sarcophagus
36(10)
3 Pitt's Diamond
46(7)
4 An Offering
53(10)
5 Forged Relics
63(9)
Part II The Classroom
72(68)
6 The Kangaroo & the Dingo
80(9)
7 Mai
89(11)
8 The Tiger of Mysore
100(10)
9 Abolitionists
110(9)
10 England's Greatness
119(10)
11 The Shield
129(11)
Part III The Memorial
140(48)
12 A Haida Carving
147(7)
13 Mokomokai
154(9)
14 Mining the Museum
163(6)
15 Human Zoos
169(9)
16 The Coffin
178(10)
Part IV The Playground
188(66)
17 Museum Highlights
197(7)
18 Crowd Control
204(11)
19 The Ship
215(9)
20 Sugar Baby
224(12)
21 Change the Date
236(10)
22 Return
246(8)
Conclusion 254(10)
Coda 264(8)
Endnotes 272(24)
Bibliography 296(10)
Picture Credits 306(2)
Index 308(8)
Acknowledgements 316
Alice Procter is an historian of material culture and the creator of Uncomfortable Art Tours. She curates exhibitions, organizes events, makes podcasts and writes things under the umbrella of The Exhibitionist. Procter studied at University College London, and her academic work concentrates on the intersections of postcolonial art practice and colonial material culture, settler storytelling, the concept of whiteness in the 18th and 19th centuries, the curation of historical trauma, and myths of national identity. She has appeared on BBC Radio 4's Front Row, and her work has been featured in the New York Times, the Guardian, the New Statesman, Aljazeera.com and The Times. She is Australian but grew up in Hong Kong and London.