San Francisco Museum of Modern Art


Book Description

Edited by Janet Bishop, Corey Keller, Sarah Roberts. Foreword by Neal Benezra. Text by Gary Garrels, Henry Urbach, Sandra S. Phillips, et al.







Welcome to the Dreamhouse


Book Description

In Welcome to the Dreamhouse feminist media studies pioneer Lynn Spigel takes on Barbie collectors, African American media coverage of the early NASA space launches, and television’s changing role in the family home and its links to the broader visual culture of modern art. Exploring postwar U.S. media in the context of the period’s reigning ideals about home and family life, Spigel looks at a range of commercial objects and phenomena, from television and toys to comic books and magazines. The volume considers not only how the media portrayed suburban family life, but also how both middle-class ideals and a perceived division between private and public worlds helped to shape the visual forms, storytelling practices, and reception of postwar media and consumer culture. Spigel also explores those aspects of suburban culture that media typically render invisible. She looks at the often unspoken assumptions about class, nation, ethnicity, race, and sexual orientation that underscored both media images (like those of 1960s space missions) and social policies of the mass-produced suburb. Issues of memory and nostalgia are central in the final section as Spigel considers how contemporary girls use television reruns as a source for women’s history and then analyzes the current nostalgia for baby boom era family ideals that runs through contemporary images of new household media technologies. Containing some of Spigel’s well-known essays on television’s cultural history as well as new essays on a range of topics dealing with popular visual culture, Welcome to the Dreamhouse is important reading for students and scholars of media and communications studies, popular culture, American studies, women’s studies, and sociology.




Art Guide Texas


Book Description

Texas is an art lover's paradise. More than one hundred venues located within the state welcome visitors to experience the visual arts. These include internationally recognized collections such as the Chinati Foundation, the Kimbell Art Museum, the Menil Collection, and the Nasher Sculpture Center; renowned encyclopedic institutions such as the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Dallas Museum of Art, and the San Antonio Museum of Art; and dozens of first-rate art centers, alternative spaces, and university galleries. In addition to delighting the eye with a wide-ranging assortment of exhibitions, many of these museums and galleries are housed within architectural gems. To enhance the reader's visits to familiar destinations and to encourage the exploration of lesser-known venues, Art Guide Texas presents the only in-depth survey devoted exclusively to the state's nonprofit visual arts institutions. Rebecca Cohen organizes the book regionally. Individual entries for museums and galleries give essential contact information, including phone numbers and Web sites, as well as a description of the collection(s) and past exhibitions, a brief history of the institution, significant architectural details about the building, and assorted practical tips. Black-and-white photographs accompany many of the entries, as well as notable quotes on art and architecture. In addition, Cohen's essays on the phenomenal late-twentieth-century growth of the arts in Texas and on arts activity in the different regions of the state provide a helpful context for exploring the arts in Texas.




Jerry Bywaters


Book Description

As an artist, art critic, museum director, and art educator, Jerry Bywaters reshaped the Texas art world and attracted national recognition for Texas artists. This first full-scale biography explores his life and work in the context of twentieth-century American art, revealing Bywaters' important role in the development of regionalist painting. Francine Carraro delves into all aspects of Bywaters' career. As an artist, Bywaters became a central figure and spokesman for a group of young, energetic painters known as the Dallas Nine (Alexandre Hogue, Everett Spruce, Otis Dozier, William Lester, and others) who broke out of the limitations of provincialism and attained national recognition beginning in the 1930s. As director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, art critic for the Dallas Morning News, and professor of art and art history at Southern Methodist University, Bywaters became a champion of the arts in Texas. Carraro traces his strong supporting role in professionalizing art institutions in Texas and defendlng the right to display art considered "subversive" in the McCarthy era. From these discussions emerges a finely drawn portrait of an artist who used a vocabulary of regional images to explore universal themes. It will be of interest to all students of American studies, national and regional art history, and twentieth-century biography.




The Turn to Process


Book Description

Explores the massive reorientation of American legal, political, and economic thinking from truths to methods between 1870 and 1970.




Review 18: Alejandra Castro Rioseco: one hundred percent woman


Book Description

5. Editorial Abate Bussoni: The beauty of the mind as a contemporary art. 7. Alejandra Castro Rioseco one hundred percent female 15. Connecting minds, building the future 23. Knowing and understanding history helps to create 27. ARCO 40th anniversary 29. The Loewe Foundation's Crafy Prize 2020 already has a winning work, "She". 37. PHE2021 47. Looking ahead: Ivorypress at twenty-five 53. io sono 55. Hauser & Wirth Menorca inaugurates with the powerful work of Mark Bradford 61. The NFT boom 65. Experiences that blend seamlessly 67. The disruptive realm of VR 69. Alicja Kwade and Nina Chanel Abney. Their first AR works 75. Breaking with traditions 81. Infinity Art, artworks on demand 85. The Stage Designer 93. Meeting of private collections 95. Formats full of impulse and emotions. Nuria Teruel 113. Chanel Next Prize for the arts 117. Two Spaniards living in New York create La Pera Projects. 119. Emerging talent 147. One year ago 157. Combining representation and abstraction. 165. Vitamin D3 167. Nowhere else in the world 179. Who is Sophia and what exactly does she sell? 183. The Goya's in Berlanga's Land 185. Official Apps. The Prado Guide. Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)