Anti-Portraiture: Challenging the Limits of the Portrait

Anti-Portraiture: Challenging the Limits of the Portrait

Anti-Portraiture: Challenging the Limits of the Portrait

Anti-Portraiture: Challenging the Limits of the Portrait

Hardcover

$135.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

The portrait has historically been understood as an artistic representation of a human subject. Its purpose was to provide a visual or psychological likenesses or an expression of personal, familial or social identity; it was typically associated with the privileged individual subject of Western modernity. Recent scholarship in the humanities and social sciences however has responded to the complex nature of twenty-first century subjectivity and proffered fresh conceptual models and theories to analyse it.

The contributors to Anti-Portraiture examine subjectivity via a range of media including sculpture, photography and installation, and make a convincing case for an expanded definition of portraiture. By offering a timely reappraisal of the terms through which this genre is approached, the chapter authors volunteer new paradigms in which to consider selfhood, embodiment and representation. In doing so they further this exciting academic debate and challenge the curatorial practices and acquisition policies of museums and galleries.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781784534127
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 01/28/2021
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.25(w) x 9.64(h) x 0.81(d)

About the Author

Kirstie Imber is an Associate Research Fellow in the Department of History of Art, Birkbeck College, University of London. She received her PhD in the cultural politics of Iran, investigating issues around voice, free speech and censorship in the works of the contemporary Iranian women artists, Samira Eskandarfar, Mandana Moghaddam, Newsha Tavakolian and Neda Razavipour.

Fiona Johnstone is an Associate Research Fellow in Art History at Birkbeck College and teaches at Central St Martins (UAL) and Middlesex University. She is a member of Durham's Centre for Medical Humanities New Generations Programme, an interdisciplinary training scheme and research network for early career researchers in the medical humanities.

Table of Contents

List of Images
Notes on the Contributors
Acknowledgements

1. Introducing the anti-portrait
Fiona Johnstone and Kirstie Imber
2. Decapitations: the portrait, the anti-portrait ... and what comes after?
of portraiture
Michael Newman
3. An Anti-Portraitist in the Realm of Letters: Gertrude Stein's Theory of Seeing
Ery Shin
4. 'A whole man, made of all men': Giacometti, Existentialism, and the 'Singular Universal'
Véronique Wiesinger
5. 'Closeness, or the Appearance of Closeness': Robert Morris's Critical Self-Portraits and the Expanding Artworld of 1960s America
David Hodge
6. Subjects Unknown: Found Images and the Depersonalization of Portraiture
Ella Mudie
7. Subject/Object: seeking the self in Susan Aldworth's portraits of schizophrenia
Julia Beaumont-Jonesvii
8.Hiding in Plain Sight: Gazing at Laura Swanson's Anti-Self-Portraits
Kristen Lindgren
9. Filling the Narrative Void: Material Portraits in the Chilean Post-Dictatorship
Megan Corbin
10. Relics, Remains and Other Objects: Non-Mimetic Portraiture in the Age of AIDS
Fiona Johnstone

Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews