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Collecting the Pre-Columbian Past (Paperback)
Elizabeth Hill Boone, Curtis M. Hinsley, George Kubler, Phyllis Mauch Messenger, Phyllis Mauch Williams
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R936
R864
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The history of Pre-Columbian collecting is a social and
aesthetic history--of ideas, people and organizations, and objects.
This richly illustrated volume examines these histories by
considering the collection and display of Pre-Columbian objects in
Europe, Latin America, and the United States. Some of the thirteen
essays locate the collecting process within its broader cultural
setting in order to explain how and why such collections were
formed, while others consider how collections have served as
documents of culture within the disciplines of archaeology and
anthropology, and as objects of fine art or aesthetic statements
within the art and art historical worlds. Nearly all contemplate
how such collections have been used as active signifiers of
political, economic, and cultural power. The thirteen essays were
originally presented at a symposium commemorating the fiftieth
anniversary of the Pre-Columbian Collection at Dumbarton Oaks. They
continue to be groundbreaking contributions to the histories of
collecting and Pre-Columbian art.
When it was first released in 1962, The Shape of Time presented a
radically new approach to the study of art history. Drawing upon
new insights in fields such as anthropology and linguistics, George
Kubler replaced the notion of style as the basis for histories of
art with the concept of historical sequence and continuous change
across time. Kubler's classic work is now made available in a
freshly designed edition. "The Shape of Time is as relevant now as
it was in 1962. This book, a sober, deeply introspective, and
quietly thrilling meditation on the flow of time and space and the
place of objects within a larger continuum, adumbrates so many of
the critical and theoretical concerns of the late twentieth and
early twenty-first century. It is both appropriate and necessary
that it re-appear in our consciousness at this time."-Edward J.
Sullivan, New York University This book will be of interest to all
students of art history and to those concerned with the nature and
theory of history in general. In a study of formal and symbolic
durations the author presents a radically new approach to the
problem of historical change. Using new ideas in anthropology and
linguistics, he pursues such questions as the nature of time, the
nature of change, and the meaning of invention. The result is a
view of historical sequence aligned on continuous change more than
upon the static notion of style-the usual basis for conventional
histories of art. "A carefully reasoned and brilliantly suggestive
essay in defense of the view that the history of art can be the
study of formal relationships, as against the view that it should
concentrate on ideas of symbols or biography."-Harper's. "It is a
most important achievement, and I am sure that it will be studies
for many years in many fields. I hope the book upsets people and
makes them reformulate."-James Ackerman. "In this brief and
important essay, George Kubler questions the soundness of the
stylistic basis of art historical studies. . . . The Shape of Time
ably states a significant position on one of the most complex
questions of modern art historical scholarship."-Virginia Quarterly
Review.
Photos Taken By Henry B. Beville, Mr. And Mrs. Jack P. Stephens,
Alan J. Bearden And Victor Amato. Map By Mary Margaret Collier.
Photos Taken By Henry B. Beville, Mr. And Mrs. Jack P. Stephens,
Alan J. Bearden And Victor Amato. Map By Mary Margaret Collier.
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