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Why did collectors seek out posters and collect ephemera during the
late-nineteenth and the twentieth centuries? How have such
materials been integrated into institutional collections today?
What inspired collectors to build significant holdings of works
from cultures other than their own? And what are the issues facing
curators and collectors of digital ephemera today? These are among
the questions tackled in this volume-the first to examine the
practices of collecting prints, posters, and ephemera during the
modern and contemporary periods. A wide range of case studies
feature collections of printed materials from the United States,
Latin America, France, Germany, Great Britain, China, Japan,
Russia, Iran, and Cuba. Fourteen essays and one roundtable
discussion, all specially commissioned from art historians,
curators, and collectors for this volume, explore key issues such
as the roles of class, politics, and gender, and address historical
contexts, social roles, value, and national and transnational
aspects of collecting practices. The global scope highlights
cross-cultural connections and contributes to a new understanding
of the place of prints, posters and ephemera within an increasingly
international art world.
The Poster: Art, Advertising, Design, and Collecting, 1860s-1900s
is a cultural history that situates the poster at the crossroads of
art, design, advertising, and collecting. Though international in
scope, the book focuses especially on France and England. Ruth E.
Iskin argues that the avant-garde poster and the original art print
played an important role in the development of a modernist language
of art in the 1890s, as well as in the adaptation of art to an era
of mass media. She moreover contends that this new form of visual
communication fundamentally redefined relations between word and
image: poster designers embedded words within the graphic, rather
than using images to illustrate a text. Posters had to function as
effective advertising in the hectic environment of the urban
street. Even though initially commissioned as advertisements, they
were soon coveted by collectors. Iskin introduces readers to the
late nineteenth-century "iconophile"--a new type of
collector/curator/archivist who discovered in poster collecting an
ephemeral archaeology of modernity. Bridging the separation between
the fields of art, design, advertising, and collecting, Iskin's
insightful study proposes that the poster played a constitutive
role in the modern culture of spectacle.
This stunningly illustrated book will appeal to art historians and
students of visual culture, as well as social and cultural history,
media, and advertising.
Why did collectors seek out posters and collect ephemera during the
late-nineteenth and the twentieth centuries? How have such
materials been integrated into institutional collections today?
What inspired collectors to build significant holdings of works
from cultures other than their own? And what are the issues facing
curators and collectors of digital ephemera today? These are among
the questions tackled in this volume-the first to examine the
practices of collecting prints, posters, and ephemera during the
modern and contemporary periods. A wide range of case studies
feature collections of printed materials from the United States,
Latin America, France, Germany, Great Britain, China, Japan,
Russia, Iran, and Cuba. Fourteen essays and one roundtable
discussion, all specially commissioned from art historians,
curators, and collectors for this volume, explore key issues such
as the roles of class, politics, and gender, and address historical
contexts, social roles, value, and national and transnational
aspects of collecting practices. The global scope highlights
cross-cultural connections and contributes to a new understanding
of the place of prints, posters and ephemera within an increasingly
international art world.
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