In this fundamental rethinking of the rise of modernism from its
beginnings in the Impressionist movement, Robert Jensen reveals
that market discourses were pervasive in the ideological defense of
modernism from its very inception and that the avant-garde actually
thrived on the commercial appeal of anti-commercialism at the turn
of the century. The commercial success of modernism, he argues,
depended greatly on possession of historical legitimacy. The very
development of modern art was inseparable from the commercialism
many of its proponents sought to transcend. Here Jensen explores
the economic, aesthetic, institutional, and ideological factors
that led to its dominance in the international art world by the
early 1900s. He emphasizes the role of the emerging dealer/gallery
market and of modernist art historiographies in evaluating modern
art and legitimizing it through the formation of a canon of
modernist masters.
In describing the canon-building of modern dealerships, Jensen
considers the new "ideological dealer" and explores the commercial
construction of artistic identity through such rhetorical concepts
as temperament and "independent art" and through such institutional
structures as the retrospective. His inquiries into the fate of the
"juste milieu," a group of dissidents who saw themselves as "true
heirs" of Impressionism, and his look at a new form of art history
emerging in Germany further expose a linear, dealer- oriented
history of modernist art constructed by or through the modernists
themselves.
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