Alfred H. Barr, Jr., and the intellectual origins of the Museum of Modern Art / Sybil Gordon Kantor.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : MIT Press, 2002Description: 472 p.: il ; 24 cmContent type:- rdacontent
- 0262112582
- N620.M9 K36 2002
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libros | Mediateca | Bibliográfica | N620.M9 K36 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 7684 |
Browsing Mediateca shelves, Collection: Bibliográfica Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
N618 B53 2017 The Whitney women and the museum they made : a family memoir / | N620.M9 A85 1997 Ej. 1 The Museum of Modern Art, New York : the history and the collection / | N620.M9 I53 1998 Ej. 1 Imagining the future of the Museum of Modern Art / | N620.M9 K36 2002 Alfred H. Barr, Jr., and the intellectual origins of the Museum of Modern Art / | N620.M9 M88 2009 Ej. 1 The Museum of Modern Art in this century / | N620.M9 S83 1998 The power of display : a history of exhibition installations at the Museum of Modern Art / | N620.S63 D3518 2011 Ej. 1 Frank Lloyd Wright y el Museo Guggenheim : el tiempo y el arquitecto / |
Incluye índice y bibliografía
Contenido: The Princeton years -- The fogg method and Paul J. Sachs: Barr and his Harvard mentor -- Barr as teacher, 1925 to 1927 -- The little magazine and modernism at harvard -- The european trip -- Modernism takes its turn in America -- Architecture, Barr, and Henry - Russell Hitchcock -- Philip Johnson and Barr: Architecture and design enter the museum -- The directorship at full throttle.
Growing up with the twentieth century, Alfred Barr (1902- 1981), founding director of the Museum of Modern Art, harnessed the cataclysm that was modernism. In this book-- part intellectual biography, part institutional history-- Sybil Gordon Kantor tells the story of the rise of modern art in America and of the man responsible for its triumph. Following the trajectory of Barr's career from the 1920s through the 1940s, Kantor penetrates the myths, both positive and negative, that surround Barr and his achievements. Barr fervently believed in an aesthetic based on the intrinsic traits of a work of art and the materials and techniques involved in its creation. Kantor shows how this formalist approach was expressed in the organizational structure of the multidepartmental museum itself, whose collections, exhibitions, and publications all expressed Barr's vision. At the same time, she shows how Barr's ability to reconcile classical objectivity and mythic irrationality allowed him to perceive modernism as an open-ended phenomenon that expanded beyond purist abstract modernism to include surrealist, nationalist, realist, and expressionist art. Drawing on interviews with Barr's contemporaries as well as on Barr's extensive correspondence, Kantor also paints vivid portraits of, among others, Jere Abbott, Katherine Dreier, Henry-Russell Hitchcock, Philip Johnson, Lincoln Kirstein, Agnes Mongan, J.B. Neumann, and Paul Sachs.
There are no comments on this title.