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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
December
Documentary, book explore
icons of 20th century American art
Melissa
Mitchell, Arts Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
12/8/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| “Imagining
America: Icons of 20th Century American Art”
is scheduled to be broadcast Dec. 28 on Public Broadcasting
Service stations nationwide; the book, which includes
400 color images, recently was published by Yale University
Press. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— You won’t need a Ph.D in art history to appreciate a new
documentary and companion book on 20th-century American art by Jonathan
Fineberg and John Carlin. The only prerequisite required of those tuning
in or turning the pages of “Imagining America: Icons of 20th Century
American Art” is a genuine interest in the American experience.
In a conscious move to appeal to a broad and diverse audience –
including those whose previous exposure to the visual arts has been
minimal – the creators of the dcumentary and book have ventured
beyond the more predictable, biographically based format. Instead, they’ve
crafted an original narrative that places some of the 20th century’s
most influential artists within the context of a broader story: that
of a relatively young, rapidly evolving nation that is forever reinventing
itself.
The two-hour documentary is scheduled to be broadcast Dec. 28 on Public
Broadcasting Service stations nationwide; the book, which includes
400 color images, recently was published by Yale
University Press.
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| University
of Illinois photo |
| Art
historian Jonathan Fineberg wanted to draw attention
to the ways in which art has reflected and helped
shaped Americans’ personal and national cultural
identities. |
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Fineberg, the Gutgsell
Professor of Art History
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, said he and Carlin,
his former graduate assistant at Yale and now chief executive officer
of the New York City-based media production company Funny Garbage, chose
a slightly unconventional approach to their presentation of the history
of 20th-century art because they wanted to draw attention to the ways
in which art has reflected and helped shape Americans’ personal
and national cultural identities.
“For me, this was an opportunity to contextualize works of art
into an ongoing discourse about values and about history, and about
where we are and who we are,” Fineberg said.
“And the film and book were structured around the most fundamental
questions in a world view: Where am I? Who am I? And how do I talk about
my experience?”
To answer those questions Fineberg and Carlin turned to examples of
work by and archival interviews with some of the nation’s most
recognizable artists of the last century; among them, Georgia O’Keeffe,
Jackson Pollock and Andy Warhol. Those icons became springboards from
which Fineberg and Carlin expanded the discussion to include other art-historical
icons that may not be as well known to the greater public, figures such
as Thomas Cole, Robert Smithson, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Cindy Sherman
and David Wojnarowicz.
In telling their story, they interspersed art and artists’ interviews
with on-camera commentary by Fineberg and other notable art historians,
curators and artists. Among them were several with connections to the
U. of I., including former School of Art and Design faculty members
Rachael DeLue, Katherine Manthorne and Buzz Spector; and former Krannert
Art Museum director Josef Helfenstein.
Another key ingredient folded into the documentary mix was music.
“We wanted to choose music -- and John took the lead in this --
that would be interesting to people, especially young people,”
Fineberg said. “I don’t want people just my age and older
watching it,” said the 59-year old professor. “I wanted
to address them on a level that is familiar and interesting to them.
It has to move fast because they move fast.”
The film and the book are based on three distinct themes or chapters.
The first, “America Pastoral,” explores the ways in which
artists interpret the natural world around them. Focusing on the work
of Cole, O’Keeffe, Smithson and others, Fineberg and Carlin attempt
to define and convey an American sense of nature.
The second section, “Songs of Myself,” looks at ways in
which artists such as Pollock, Basquiat and Sherman represent themselves,
and considers themes of reinvention and identity – on both a personal
and national scale. The final theme, “The Media Is the Message,”
draws on the work of Warhol, Wojnarowicz and others to document ways
in which artists have helped us reinterpret our cultural self-image
and identity in a mass-media dominated world.
The film version of “Imagining America” is a presentation
of South Carolina Educational Television and a co-production of MUSE
Film and Television, Public Media Inc., Funny Garbage and Perry Films.
Major funding for its production was provided by the Terra Foundation
for American Art and the Henry Luce Foundation, with additional support
from the U. of I., the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Whitney Museum
of American Art, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
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