1st Edition

Routledge Revivals: Painting, Language and Modernity (1985)

By Michael Phillipson Copyright 1985
    223 Pages
    by Routledge

    223 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1985, this book draws together the author’s artistic with analytical practices which had been developed over many years of sociological enquiry. It interprets a ‘work of art’ as a site on which a viewer or critic is invited to share in questioning celebration of the painting itself. The author reassesses modern painting’s relation to its own origins and to tradition in light of the emergence of ‘postmodern’ practice — exploring its engagement of fundamental questions about language and being. Also assessed is the relevance of the metaphors of writings and Reading to an understanding of painting and viewing practices — looking at painters’ writings as well as phenomenological and post-structuralist writers.

    Acknowledgments; 1 A More or Less Contemporary Pluralogue (Broken) 2 In Advance of the Broken Ar… 3 Recuperating Modernity 4 Modernity Underwrites Itself 5 Painting: Writing 6 Painting: Reading 7 Painting into and out of Meaning 8 Painting Signing-on and Signing-off 9 Painting: Criticism 10 A More Contemporary Pluralogue Re-gained (and Lost); References to the Pluralogues; Bibliography; Index

    Biography

    Michael Phillipson