Christian Kravagna – Post-War Modernism b/w Eurocentrism and Decolonization
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Christian Kravagna – Post-War Modernism b/w Eurocentrism and Decolonization

Da Institution School
Evento online

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A decolonial reading of postwar modernism, linking abstraction, race, migration and power in Europe, the US and the UK.

Lesson part of the course Decolonised History of Art: Global Narratives from 1900 to the Present. Click here for the programme and the entire course.

Decolonizing modern art cannot be limited to the progressive inclusion of hitherto marginalized regions outside the West. A critique of modernism’s colonial dimensions must also examine the colonial divide within the societies, cultures and art worlds of the West. We must ask what Abstract Expressionism has to do with the Civil Rights movement and how postcolonial migration has changed the artistic landscape in England or France in the 1950s and 60s. During World War II and in the years that followed, white and Black artists, critics, and institutions worked on different concepts of modernism. As this lesson demonstrates with a focus on Western Europe and North America, questions of form and expression, abstraction or realism, were not the only issues at the center of this debate. In the US, critics such as Clement Greenberg, museums such as MoMA, and artists such as Ad Reinhardt, Hale Woodruff, and Loïs Mailou Jones were also concerned with creating specific genealogies of modern art to legitimize their concepts of the advanced art of the present. We follow the artistic work and cultural engagement of painter Norman Lewis, who navigates between “universalist” abstraction and anti-racism, and we take a look at the aesthetic politics and institutional struggles of Afro-Asian artists like Rasheed Araeen, Frank Bowling, and David Medalla and in the UK in the postwar decades.

Christian Kravagna is an art historian and curator specializing in postcolonial studies, global modernisms, and the politics of representation. He has been Professor of Postcolonial Studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna since 2006 and has authored and edited key works on transcultural art history and institutional critique. Kravagna has curated international exhibitions and contributed to major scholarly debates on migration, decolonial perspectives, and artistic mobility.

Categoria: Arts, Fine Art

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gen 31, · 06:00 PST