WORLD OF ART WORLD OF ART CHAPTER EIGHTH EDITION World of Art, Eighth Edition Henry M. Sayre Copyright © 2016, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved. The Individual and Cultural Identity 25
WORLD OF ARTWORLD OF ART
CHAPTER
EIGHTH EDITION
World of Art, Eighth EditionHenry M. Sayre
Copyright © 2016, 2013, 2010by Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliates.
All rights reserved.
The Individual and Cultural Identity
25
Learning ObjectivesLearning Objectives
1. Define nationalism and describe how the arts have been used to construct and critique national identities.
2. Describe how the visual signs of class inform works of art.
3. Discuss racial identity as it manifests itself in African-American art.
IntroductionIntroduction1 of 21 of 2
• Gender plays an important role in the formation of identity, as does ethnic/class distinctions, as well as social and political allegiances to community and state.
• The masked dance is a ritual activity universally practiced from one culture to the next.
IntroductionIntroduction2 of 22 of 2
• It unites the creative efforts of sculptors, dancers, musicians, etc.
• The banda mask is used by the Baga Mandori people who live on the Atlantic coastline of Guinea. This is usually performed at night, but
for the sake of creating a photographic record, villagers agreed to perform it at dusk.
Banda dance, Baga Mandori, Guinea.1987.
Photograph courtesy of Frederick John Lamp. [Fig. 25-1]
National Identity in Europe and AmericaNational Identity in Europe and America1 of 31 of 3
• Throughout the nineteenth century and part of the twentieth, people around the world increasingly began to define themselves as part of larger groups.
• Nationalists claimed that people sharing the same language, historic experience and often ethnic identity, made up a nation.
National Identity in Europe and AmericaNational Identity in Europe and America2 of 32 of 3
• Nationalism was closely tied to the idea of throwing off the yolk of monarchs and rulers.
• One of the great artistic expressions of this sentiment is Eugène Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People. A bare-breasted Lady Liberty is symbolic
of freedom's nurturing power.
Eugène Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People.1830. Oil on canvas. 8' 6-3/8" × 10' 8" Musée du Louvre, Paris.
Louvre-Lens, France/Bridgeman Images. [Fig. 25-2]
National Identity in Europe and AmericaNational Identity in Europe and America3 of 33 of 3
• Nationalist sentiment in the U.S. was tied to the country's self-definition as the home of rugged individuals able to fend for themselves in the frontier wilderness.
• John Gast illustrated this sense of American national identity in his popular painting American Progress.
John Gast, American Progress.1872. Oil on canvas. 20-1/4 × 30-1/4" Private collection.Photo © Christie's Images/Bridgeman Images. [Fig. 25-3]
Native American Tribal History and IdentityNative American Tribal History and Identity1 of 21 of 2
• Native Americans self-identify as a group insofar as they can trace their ancestry to pre-contact peoples.
• They share the common history of their conquest, but the songs, stories, and dances passed down through the generations are largely unique to each.
Native American Tribal History and IdentityNative American Tribal History and Identity2 of 22 of 2
• The Native Americans of the Great Plains, unlike many other tribes, recorded their history in copious detail.
• Humans are generally stick figures, and events are described in selective detail.
• Some tribes, particularly the Lakota Sioux and Kiowa, recorded family or band history in what is known as a "winter count."
Sioux winter count.ca. 1900. Muslin, wax crayon. 69-1/4 × 35-1/4". The John and Marva Warnock Collection,
Los Altos, California.Photo courtesy of Splendid Heritage. [Fig. 25-4]
National Identity in China and JapanNational Identity in China and Japan1 of 61 of 6
• In Asia nationalist sentiment had been long established, stretching back to the Qin dynasty in China.
• A symbolic vocabulary of resistance arose. Orchids, which flourish without soil
around their roots, symbolized the theft of Chinese soil by invaders.
National Identity in China and JapanNational Identity in China and Japan2 of 62 of 6
• A symbolic vocabulary of resistance arose. Bamboo represented flexibility, the quality
that allows it to bend but not break. Pine, which can grow in poor, rocky soil
signified cultural survival. Plum, which blooms in winter despite the
harsh conditions, stood for perseverance in the face of adversity.
Ke Jiusi, Bamboo, after Wen Tong, Yuan dynasty.1343. Hanging scroll, ink on silk. 42-3/8 × 18-3/4" Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
ex coll.: C. C. Wang Family, Gift of Oscar L. Tang Family, 2006.571. © 2015. Image copyright Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence. [Fig. 25-5]
National Identity in China and JapanNational Identity in China and Japan3 of 63 of 6
• During the Yuan dynasty of the Mongol conquerors, these became the very symbols of Chinese national identity.
• The Japanese were even more protective of their identity.
• Christianity, even as practiced by foreigners, was banned altogether in 1614.
National Identity in China and JapanNational Identity in China and Japan4 of 64 of 6
• In 1635, the Japanese were forbidden to travel abroad, and in 1641 foreign trade was limited to the Dutch.
• Japan would remain sealed from foreign influence until 1853, when the American commodore Matthew Perry sailed in with four warships and a letter from the president of the U.S. urging Japan to receive the American sailors.
National Identity in China and JapanNational Identity in China and Japan5 of 65 of 6
• But a strong sense of national identity was firmly established, and it resulted, in an aggressive nationalism designed to assert Japan's preeminence in Asia.
• This penchant for nationalist feeling in Japan began to reemerge in the 1980s with Japan's rise as a commercial powerhouse built on technological innovation.
National Identity in China and JapanNational Identity in China and Japan6 of 66 of 6
• It inspired Yanagi Yukinori to create an installation titled Hinomaru Illumination (Amaterasu and Haniwa).
• The haniwa here represent the Japanese people who blindly pay obeisance to those in power.
Yanagi Yukinori, Hinomaru Illumination (Amatersau and Haniwa).1993. Neon, neon transformer, programming circuit, painted steel, and haniwa figures;
dimensions variable. Installation at the Museum of Art, Kochi, Japan.Courtesy of Miyake Fine Art, Tokyo and Yanagi Studio. [Fig. 25-6]
Class and IdentityClass and Identity
• In industrialized societies, economic status played a large role in determining a person's identity.
• People came to identify themselves in terms of class.
Making ClassMaking Class1 of 41 of 4
• Visual clues often allow us to determine a person's class.
• In 1913, when George Bellows painted the two works that were set in New York City, which was one of the most class-conscious cities in the world. Cliff Dwellers showed the poor foreigners
living in the city, while A Day in June showed the wealthy enjoying a day in the park.
George Bellows, Cliff Dwellers.1913. Oil on canvas. 40-3/16 × 42-1/16". Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Los Angeles County Fund. 16.4. Image courtesy of LACMA. [Fig. 25-7]
George Bellows, A Day in June.1913. Oil on canvas. 36-1/2 × 48". Detroit Institute of Arts.
Detroit Museum of Art Purchase, Lizzie Merrill Palmer Fund, 17.17. Photo © 2015, Detroit Institute of Arts. [Fig. 25-8]
Making ClassMaking Class2 of 42 of 4
• Similar class divisions defined Paris in the second half of the nineteenth century.
• This can be seen when comparing Pierre-Auguste Renoir's Bal du Moulin de la Galette and Edgar Degas's The Glass of Absinthe. Both are depictions of different aspects
of the working class.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Bal du Moulin de la Galette.1876. Oil on canvas. 4' 3-1/2" × 5' 9". Musée d'Orsay, Paris.
Bridgeman Images. [Fig. 25-9]
Edgar Degas, The Glass of Absinthe.1875–76. Oil on canvas. 36 × 27". Musée d'Orsay, Paris.
Photo Scala, Florence. [Fig. 25-10]
Making ClassMaking Class3 of 43 of 4
• Renoir masks their origins, dressing them in the bright fashions of the day and bringing them into the world of his intellectual friends as if they belonged there.
• Degas's is indoors and closed-in, its figures isolated in their thoughts.
Making ClassMaking Class4 of 44 of 4
• One of the favorite subjects of the ukiyo-e printmakers in nineteenth-century Japan was the landscape print.
• The most important of these is a series by Utagawa Hiroshige called The Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido. Known for its landscape views, it also
offers the viewer an view of Japanese social classes and an essay on class division.
Utagawa Hiroshige, Hamamatsu: Winter Scene, plate 30 from The Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido, Hoeido edition.
1831–34. Woodblock print. 9-7/8 × 14-3/4". Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, U.K.Art Archive/Ashmolean Museum. [Fig. 25-11]
Place and DisplacementPlace and Displacement1 of 61 of 6
• The broad, open avenues in Gustave Caillebotte's painting Place de l'Europe on a Rainy Day were the result of what has come to be known as the Haussmannization of Paris.
• Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann was tasked with planning the modernization of Paris by destroying the old city and rebuilding it.
Gustave Caillebotte, Place de l'Europe on a Rainy Day.1876–77. Oil on canvas. 82-1/2 × 108-3/4". The Art Institute of Chicago.
© 2015 Art Institute of Chicago. [Fig. 25-12]
Place and DisplacementPlace and Displacement2 of 62 of 6
• The goal was to rid Paris of its medieval character, transforming it into the most beautiful city in the world—and to prevent the possibility of uprisings again like that depicted in Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People.
Place and DisplacementPlace and Displacement3 of 63 of 6
• The destruction of working-class neighborhoods throughout Paris was the price the city paid for this transformation.
• It resulted in a city inhabited almost exclusively by the bourgeoisie and upper-class citizens.
Place and DisplacementPlace and Displacement4 of 64 of 6
• Paris became a city of leisure, surrounded by a ring of industrial and working-class suburbs, and it remains so today.
• Since the early 1980s, Beijing has undergone a transformation similar to Haussmann's transformation of Paris.
Place and DisplacementPlace and Displacement5 of 65 of 6
• The traditional working-class houses (siheyuan) have been destroyed and tiny alleyways (hutong) widened into boulevards as the Chinese capital has transformed itself into an international metropolis.
Aerial view of old hutong area, Beijing.© Radius Images/Corbis. [Fig. 25-13]
Place and DisplacementPlace and Displacement6 of 66 of 6
• Zhang Dali's graffiti works, a series of profiles of his own head called Dialogue and Demolition, are a reaction to this modernization.
• The two profiles are metaphors for the individual's place in society and the loss of that place in the onslaught of demolition.
Zhang Dali, Dialogue and Demolition No. 50.1998. Photograph. 23-5/8 × 35-3/8". Klein Sun Gallery, New York.
Courtesy of Klein Sun Gallery, Zhang Dali. [Fig. 25-14]
Racial Identity and African-American Racial Identity and African-American ExperienceExperience
1 of 21 of 2
• Western culture has tended to associate blackness with negative qualities and whiteness with positive ones.
• In "Race"ing Sideways, Nikolai Buglaj has 13 racers tied for the lead in a race no one seems intent on winning. This equality is an illusion.
Racial Identity and African-American Racial Identity and African-American ExperienceExperience
2 of 22 of 2
• In "Race"ing Sideways, Nikolai Buglaj has 13 racers tied for the lead in a race no one seems intent on winning. It comments on the lack of progress we
have made in race and class relations in this country.
Nikolai Buglaj, "Race"ing Sideways.1991. Graphite and ink. 3 × 40".
[Fig. 25-15]
Double Consciousness and the Great Double Consciousness and the Great MigrationMigration
1 of 51 of 5
• Progress has been the driving force of the Civil Rights Movement since the beginning of the twentieth century.
Double Consciousness and the Great Double Consciousness and the Great MigrationMigration
2 of 52 of 5
• From 1915 through 1918, between 200,000 and 350,000 Southern blacks moved north in what came to be called the Great Migration. Transformed from field hands into
industrial laborers, these migrants faced a real crisis in self-definition.
Double Consciousness and the Great Double Consciousness and the Great MigrationMigration
3 of 53 of 5
• This Great Migration was later celebrated in a series of 60 paintings by the African-American artist Jacob Lawrence. Throughout the series, Lawrence's
figures are almost faceless, two-dimensional silhouettes, possessing almost no individuality.
Double Consciousness and the Great Double Consciousness and the Great MigrationMigration
4 of 54 of 5
• This Great Migration was later celebrated in a series of 60 paintings by the African-American artist Jacob Lawrence. They represent the race itself, the
shared humanity (or inhumanity) of what it means to be a black person in America.
Jacob Lawrence, The Migration of the Negro, Panel No. 60: And the Migrants Kept Coming.
1940–41. Casein tempera on hardboard panel. 18 × 12". Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Gift of Ms. David M. Levy, 28.1942.30. Digital image, Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Florence. © 2015 Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation,
Seattle/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. [Fig. 25-16]
Double Consciousness and the Great Double Consciousness and the Great MigrationMigration
5 of 55 of 5
• Aaron Douglas's Aspiration celebrates many of the same themes as Lawrence's Migration series.
• It depicted the progression out of slavery, out of the South, and toward the promise of the industrial North.
Aaron Douglas, Aspiration.1936. Oil on canvas. 5 × 5'. Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
Photo © Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Art © Heirs of Aaron Douglas/Licensed by VAGA, New York. [Fig. 25-17]
New African-American IdentitiesNew African-American Identities1 of 21 of 2
• The "calling cards" of artist Adrian Piper were designed to rebuke the offenders who made racist comments near her or assumed she was "available" during social events.
• Piper identified as a woman, an American, and racially mixed; and these identities didn't rest easily with each other.
Adrian Piper, My Calling (Card) #1 (for Dinners and Cocktail Parties).1986–90. Performance props: business cards with printed text on cardboard. 3-1/2 × 2".
Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington, IN.Gift of John P. Bowles, 2006.558, 2006.559. Photo: Michael Cavanagh and Kevin
Montague. © APRA Foundation Berlin. [Fig. 25-18]
Adrian Piper, My Calling (Card) #2 (for Bars and Discos).Performance props: business cards with printed text on cardboard, 3-1/2 × 2". Indiana
University Art Museum, Bloomington, INGift of John P. Bowles, 2006.558, 2006.559. Photo: Michael Cavanagh and Kevin
Montague. © APRA Foundation Berlin. [Fig. 25-18]
New African-American IdentitiesNew African-American Identities2 of 22 of 2
• Thelma Golden's exhibition Freestyle introduced the phrase "Post-Black" into the discussion—artists who were first and foremost artists and only secondarily black.
• Rashid Johnson's shelf-like sculpture Souls of Black Folk—"a thing to put things on"—embodies just this "Post-Black" sensibility.
Rashid Johnson, Souls of Black Folk.2010. Black soap, wax, books, vinyl, brass, shea butter, plants, space rocks, mirrors, gold
paint, stained wood. 9' 6" × 10' 4-3/4" × 24-1/8".© Rashid Johnson. Courtesy of the artist, Hauser & Wirth and David Kordansky Gallery.
[Fig. 25-19]
The Critical ProcessThe Critical Process1 of 41 of 4
• Thinking about the Individual and Cultural Identity Flags were not commonly used as
symbols of national identity until the eighteenth century.
Americans came to identify closely with their flag.
The Critical ProcessThe Critical Process2 of 42 of 4
• Thinking about the Individual and Cultural Identity One of the most controversial works of
art that has ever addressed the politics that surround the American flag is Dread Scott's What Is the Proper Way to Display a U.S. Flag?
The Critical ProcessThe Critical Process3 of 43 of 4
• Thinking about the Individual and Cultural Identity It consisted of an American flag draped
on the floor beneath photographs of flag-draped coffins and South Koreans burning the flag.
Beneath the photos was a ledger in which viewers were asked to record their opinions.
The Critical ProcessThe Critical Process4 of 44 of 4
• Thinking about the Individual and Cultural Identity The problem was that the flag was on
the floor, and that it was hard to write in the ledger without stepping on it.
Viewers had to choose which they revered more—the flag or freedom of speech.
Dread Scott. What Is the Proper Way to Display a U.S. Flag?1988. Gelatin silver print, U.S. flag, book, pen, shelf, audience. 6' 8" × 10' 8" × 5'.
[Fig. 25-20]
Thinking BackThinking Back
1. Define nationalism and describe how the arts have been used to construct and critique national identities.
2. Describe how the visual signs of class inform works of art.
3. Discuss racial identity as it manifests itself in African-American art.