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Title Contemporary Korean art : Tansaekhwa and the urgency of method / Joan Kee.
Author Kee, Joan.

Location Call No. Status Notes
 Purdy-Kresge Library  ND 1065.5 .M65 K44 2013    CHECKED IN
Description vii, 347 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
text rdacontent
unmediated rdamedia
volume rdacarrier
Summary " Starting in the mid-1960s, a group of Korean artists began to push paint, soak canvas, drag pencils, rip paper, and otherwise manipulate the materials of painting in ways that prompted critics to describe their actions as "methods" rather than artworks. A crucial artistic movement of twentieth-century Korea, Tansaekhwa (monochromatic painting) also became one of its most famous and successful. Promoted in Seoul, Tokyo, and Paris, Tansaekhwa grew to be the international face of contemporary Korean art and a cornerstone of contemporary Asian art. In this full-color, richly illustrated account--the first of its kind in English--Joan Kee provides a fresh interpretation of the movement's emergence and meaning that sheds new light on the history of abstraction, twentieth-century Asian art, and contemporary art in general. Combining close readings, archival research, and interviews with leading Tansaekhwa artists, Kee focuses on an essential but often overlooked dimension of the movement: how artists made a case for abstraction as a way for viewers to engage productively with the world and its systems. As Kee shows, artists such as Lee Ufan, Park Seobo, Kwon Young-woo, Yun Hyongkeun, and Ha Chonghyun urgently stressed certain fundamentals, recognizing that overwhelming forces such as decolonization, authoritarianism, and the rise of a new postwar internationalism could be approached through highly individual experiences that challenged viewers to consider how they understood their world rather than why. Against the backdrop of the Cold War, decolonization, and the declaration of martial law in South Korea, these artists asked questions that continue to resonate today: In what ways can art matter to the world? How does art exert agency when its viewers live in times of explicit or implicit duress? How can specific social and political conditions inspire or influence methods and styles? "-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Subject Tansaekhwa (Art movement)
Art and society -- Korea (South) -- History -- 20th century.
ART / Asian.
HISTORY / Asia / Korea.
Art and society. (OCoLC)fst00815432
Monochrome painting. (OCoLC)fst01025546
Tansaekhwa (Art movement) (OCoLC)fst01895591
Korea (South) (OCoLC)fst01206791
1900 - 1999
Genre History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Added Title Tansaekhwa and the urgency of method
Standard No. 816563821
ISBN 9780816679874 (hc : acid-free paper)
0816679878 (hc : acid-free paper)
9780816679881 (pb)
0816679886 (pb)
OCLC # 816563818
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