1st Edition

Globalizing East European Art Histories Past and Present

Edited By Beáta Hock, Anu Allas Copyright 2018
    232 Pages 14 Color & 41 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    248 Pages 14 Color & 41 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    232 Pages 14 Color & 41 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This edited collection reassesses East-Central European art by offering transnational perspectives on its regional or national histories, while also inserting the region into contemporary discussions of global issues. Both in popular imagination and, to some degree, scholarly literature, East-Central Europe is persistently imagined as a hermetically isolated cultural landscape. This book restores the diverse ways in which East-Central European art has always been entangled with actors and institutions in the wider world. The contributors engage with empirically anchored and theoretically argued case studies from historical periods representing notable junctures of globalization: the early modern period, the age of Empires, the time of socialist rule and the global Cold War, and the most recent decades of postsocialism understood as a global condition.

    Part I. CHALLENGING THE NATIONAL CONTAINER. FROM THE TRANSNATIONAL TO THE PLANETARY

    1. Tomasz GRUSIECKI — Uprooting Origins: Polish-Lithuanian Art and the Challenge of Pluralism
    2.  

    3. Beáta HOCK — Managing Trans/Nationality: Cultural Actors within Imperial Structures
    4.  

    5. Kristóf NAGY — From Fringe Interest to Hegemony: The Emergence of the Soros Network in Eastern Europe
    6.  

    7. Maja and Reuben FOWKES — Towards a Planetary History of East European Art

     Part II. HYBRIDITY: IDENTITIES AND FORMS

    1. Carolyn C. GUILE — Reflections on the Politics of Portraiture in Early Modern Poland
    2. Jörg SCHELLER — Eastern Europeanizing Globalization: Polish Artists at the Venice Art Biennale and the Microcosms of Globalization
    3.  

    4. Sarah SCHLACHETZKI — Modernism on the Margins. Breslau’s Architectural Future Between High-Rise Utopia and Down-to-Earth Realism

     Part III. GLOBAL COMMUNITIES AND THE TRAFFIC IN IDEAS

    1. Agata JAKUBOWSKA — The Circulation of Feminist Ideas in Communist Poland
    2.  

    3. Anu ALLAS — "Our Imaginings Unite with Reality": Ideological Encounters in Milan Knížák’s Ten Lessons
    4. Katarzyna CYTLAK — Transculturation, Cultural Transfer, and the Colonial Matrix of Power on the Cold War Margins: East European Art Seen from Latin America

      Part IV. CONTEMPORARY ART PRAXIS AND THE PRODUCTION OF DISCOURSES
    5. Joanna SOKOŁOWSKA — Undoing the East: Towards the World’s (Semi-)Peripheries
    6.  

    7. Amy BRYZGEL — Performance Art in the Global Flow of Cultural Goods: Some Eastern European Positions
    8.  

    9. Alpesh Kantilal PATEL — Artistic Responses to LGBTQI Gaps in Archives: From World War II Asian America to Postwar Soviet Estonia

    Biography

    Beáta Hock is a Senior Researcher at the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO), Leipzig.

    Anu Allas is an art historian and curator in the Kumu Art Museum in Tallinn, Estonia.

    "This volume comes out as a rewarding, rich, and important contribution and academic reader, and the editors while collecting work dealing with art from a wide historical scope have been able to pursue fundamental and unsettling theoretical questions of the writing of art history outside the nationalist paradigm."

    --Baltic Worlds

    "The book is both an essen-tial compendium and a resourceful reference text, sustained by a solid and up-to-date theoretical discourse and empirical inquiry. It represents a critical contribution to area studies such as East European studies, opening up to a plethora of transnational histories in a strong comparative approach..."

    --Europa Orientali

    "Hock's East European 'histories' make for an original contribution to cross-cultural, transnational and global perspectives on the production and reception of contemporary art, from which that region has been unaccountably relegated to the margins."

    --Critique d'art

    "Globalizing East European Art Histories: Past and Present is both theoretically very stimulating and, with its case studies, opens and develops new research optics in terms of the ongoing transnationalism research agenda in art history and cultural studies."

    --Connections

    "The editors make a case for incorporating a transnational perspective in the methodologies and categories of new art histories. Such a perspective is just as vital for comprehending the cross-border entanglements in East-Central European art as it is for practicing world art history or global art studies as particular study fields of art history at large."

    --BUKSZ: Budapest Review of Books