Adrian Piper
Race, Gender, and Embodiment
Book
Pages: 352
Illustrations: 69 illus., incl. 17 in color
Published: February 2011
Author: John P. Bowles
Subjects
Gender and Sexuality > Feminism and Women’s Studies, Art and Visual Culture > Feminist Art, African American Studies and Black Diaspora
Gender and Sexuality > Feminism and Women’s Studies, Art and Visual Culture > Feminist Art, African American Studies and Black Diaspora
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This title will be released on February 14, 2011
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Author/Editor Bios
Back to TopJohn P. Bowles is Associate Professor of African American Art at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. His articles and art criticism have appeared in Signs, American Art, Art Journal, Art in America, and Art Papers, among other publications.
Table Of Contents
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Illustrations vii
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Adrian Piper's Performance of Race and the Moral Question of Racism 1
Section I, 1965–1970
The Paradox of the Black Woman Conceptual Artist
1. Contingent and Universal: Adrian Piper and the Minimalist Ideal 33
2. Hypothesis: Modernism and the Woman Artist's Studio 69
Section II, 1970–1975
Personal Politics and Performance Art
3. May 1970: Art and Activism 125
4. Catalysis: Feminist Art and Experience 162
5. Food for the Spirit: Transcendence and Desire 205
6. "Acting Like a Man": The Mythic Being and Black Feminism 229
Conclusion: The Mythic Being and the Aesthetics of Direct Address 257
Notes 263
Bibliography 299
Index 319
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Adrian Piper's Performance of Race and the Moral Question of Racism 1
Section I, 1965–1970
The Paradox of the Black Woman Conceptual Artist
1. Contingent and Universal: Adrian Piper and the Minimalist Ideal 33
2. Hypothesis: Modernism and the Woman Artist's Studio 69
Section II, 1970–1975
Personal Politics and Performance Art
3. May 1970: Art and Activism 125
4. Catalysis: Feminist Art and Experience 162
5. Food for the Spirit: Transcendence and Desire 205
6. "Acting Like a Man": The Mythic Being and Black Feminism 229
Conclusion: The Mythic Being and the Aesthetics of Direct Address 257
Notes 263
Bibliography 299
Index 319
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Paper ISBN:
978-0-8223-4920-4 /
Hardcover ISBN:
978-0-8223-4896-2 /
eISBN:
978-0-8223-9373-3 /
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1215/9780822393733
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