Buch, Englisch, 216 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm
The politics of looking South African
Buch, Englisch, 216 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm
Reihe: Routledge Research in Art Museums and Exhibitions
ISBN: 978-1-041-03912-9
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
This study presents the first history of the South African national pavilion at the Venice Biennale since it first participated in 1950 up until its contemporary pavilions.
Covering a contentious period in South African history, the pavilion engenders a thought-provoking engagement with questions around national identity and visual representation. What has it meant for a country like South Africa to be at the Venice Biennale? How national is a national pavilion? The books acts as a case study highlighting how this understanding of what is ‘national’ and what is ‘representative’ has changed throughout the decades. At first it was associated with stylistic concerns, evidencing the polemic post-war shift from academic to modern art in the mid-century; towards the 1960s, South African art in Venice sought to capture something of a specific ‘South Africanness’ rather than seeking to emulate the general tendencies of Euro-American modernism; the country’s exclusion from Venice during the boycott years of the 1970s to early 1990s evidences the clear emergence of a politically conscious national aesthetic; South Africa’s re-entry highlights how the tenets of post-apartheid nation-building had to be navigated within a postmodern, globalist art world beset with post-nationalism. This study shows that South Africa has always been caught between national determinations and internationalist aspirations and the contrast of this tension is nowhere more sharply reflected than at the Venice Biennale with its national pavilion structure.
This book is suitable for researchers and students in Art History, African Studies and Museum Studies.
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate and Undergraduate Advanced
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction 1 Not Our National Pavilion: Nationalism versus Modernism and the first South African pavilion of 1950 2 The Triumph of the Modern: South Africa’s first decade at the Venice Biennale 3 The ‘Spirit of Africa’: An ideological repositioning of South African art in Venice 4 Pariah Pavilion: The Venice Biennale boycotts South Africa 5 ‘Here is South Africa’: Nation building in an era of post-national globalism 6 Contemporary Concerns: Nation and representation in the structure and content of South Africa’s 21st-century pavilions Conclusion