What do we mean by
'art'? As a category of objects, the concept belongs to a Western
cultural tradition, originally European and now increasingly global,
but how useful is it for understanding other traditions? To
understand art as a universal human value, we need to look at how the
concept was constructed in order to reconstruct it through an understanding of the wider world.
Western art values
have a pervasive influence upon non-Western cultures and upon Western
attitudes to them. This innovative yet accessible new text explores the
ways theories of art developed as Western knowledge of the world expanded
through exploration and trade, conquest, colonisation and research into
other cultures, present and past. It considers the issues arising from
the historical relationships which brought diverse artistic traditions
together under the influence of Western art values, looking at how art
has been used by colonisers and colonised in the causes of collecting
and commerce, cultural hegemony and autonomous identities.
World Art questions
conventional Western assumptions of art from an anthropological perspective which allows comparison between cultures. It treats art as a
property of artefacts rather than a category of objects, reclaiming the idea
of 'world art' from the 'art world'.
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10: 1847889433
| ISBN-13: 978-1847889430
paperback £17.99
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