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Rural Modern: American Art Beyond the City
Hardback
Main Details
Description
Paintings of New England coastlines, small-town Pennsylvania, Southwestern canyons, Midwestern farms, and other evocative landscapes fill the pages of Rural Modern. More than sixty modernist works, created between the wars, present an important and often overlooked history: how American painters adapted avant-garde styles like Cubism and Fauvism to reimagine familiar landscapes and develop a distinctively American modernist vernacular. Richly illustrated and with insightful essays by noted scholars, Rural Modern traces this development through a broad range of works by both lesser-known and widely celebrated artists, including Arthur Dove, Dale Nichols, Grant Wood, N. C. Wyeth, Charles Sheeler, Charles Burchfield, Marsden Hartley, and Stuart Davis. As important as the marvel of the twentieth-century city was to modernist artists such as these, many sought respite and even refuge in quieter, rural areas of the country, and soon helped to confirm modernism s enduring nature.
Author Biography
Amanda C. Burdan is the associate curator and Christine B. Podmaniczky is the curator of N. C. Wyeth Collections and Historic Properties at the Brandywine River Museum of Art, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. Betsy Fahlman is a professor of art history at the School of Art at Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, Arizona State University, Tempe. Jonathan Walz is curator of American art at the Sheldon Museum of Art, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Catherine Whitney is the chief curator and curator of American art at the Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa.
Reviews"In addition to providing a full visual document of the works in the exhibition, the accompanying catalogue for Rural Modern, published by Skira Rizzoli, will explore in-depth topics related to the exhibition's themes. Along with a major essay by Amanda C. Burdan, the catalogue includes insightful texts by Betsy Fahlman (Arizona State University), Christine B. Podmaniczky (Brandywine River Museum of Art), Jonathan Frederick Walz (The Columbus Museum), and Catherine Whitney (Philbrook Museum of Art). The essays provide a broad spectrum of approaches to the exhibition's theme including concentrations on individual artists, specialized styles of American modernism, regional identity, and important social issues affecting artists in rural America." -ArtFixDaily.com
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