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What's the Use of Art?: Asian Visual and Material Culture in Context [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 328 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x167x24 mm, weight: 682 g, 52 illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Dec-2007
  • Leidėjas: University of Hawai'i Press
  • ISBN-10: 0824830636
  • ISBN-13: 9780824830632
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 328 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x167x24 mm, weight: 682 g, 52 illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Dec-2007
  • Leidėjas: University of Hawai'i Press
  • ISBN-10: 0824830636
  • ISBN-13: 9780824830632
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Post-Enlightenment notions of culture, which have been naturalized in the West for centuries, require that art be autonomously beautiful, universal, and devoid of any practical purpose. The authors of this multidisciplinary volume seek to complicate this understanding of art by examining art objects from across Asia with attention to their functional, ritual, and everyday contexts. From tea bowls used in the Japanese tea ceremony to television broadcasts of Japanese puppet theater; from Indian wedding chamber paintings to art looted by the British army from the Chinese emperor's palace; from the adventures of a Balinese magical dagger to the political functions of classical Khmer images - the authors challenge prevailing notions of artistic value by introducing new ways of thinking about culture. The chapters consider art objects as they are involved in the world: how they operate and are experienced in specific sites, collections, rituals, performances, political and religious events and imagination, and in individual peoples' lives; how they move from one context to another and change meaning and value in the process (for example, when they are collected, traded, and looted or when their images appear in art history textbooks); how their memories and pasts are or are not part of their meaning and experience. Rather than lead to a single universalizing definition of art, the essays offer multiple, divergent, and case-specific answers to the question ""What is the use of art?"" and argue for the need to study art as it is used and experienced.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction Wrapping and Unwrapping Art 1(20)
Morgan Pitelka
Functions
From the Living Rock: Understanding Figural Representation in Early South Asia
21(25)
Robert Decaroli
Disposable but Indispensable: The Earthenware Vessel as Vehicle of Meaning in Japan
46(31)
Louise Allison Cort
From the Wedding Chamber to the Museum: Relocating the Ritual Arts of Madhubani
77(23)
Richard H. Davis
In the Realm of the Indigo Queen: Dyeing, Exchange Magic, and the Elusive Tourist Dollar on Sumba
100(29)
Janet Hoskins
Movements
Plunder, Markets, and Museums: The Biographies of Chinese Imperial Objects in Europe and North America
129(13)
James L. Hevia
Situating Moving Objects: A Sino-Japanese Catalogue of Imported Items, 800 CE to the Present
142(37)
Cynthea J. Bogel
Memories
Angkor Revisited: The State of Statuary
179(1)
Ashley Thompson
An Ancestral Keris, Balinese Kingship, and a Modern Presidency
179(59)
Lene Pedersen
Raw Ingredients and Deposit Boxes in Balinese Sanctuaries: A Congruence of Obsessions
238(34)
Kaja M. McGowan
Conclusion Ways of Experiencing Art: Art History, Television, and Javanese Wayang 272(33)
Jan Mrazek
Contributors 305(4)
Index 309
Jan Mrazek is assistant professor in the Southeast Asian Studies Programme, National University of Singapore. Morgan Pitelka is associate professor in the Asian Studies Department at Occidental College in Los Angeles.