Art Since 1900: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism
Thames & Hudson, $125 hb, 704 pp
Ex cathedra
That said, Art Since 1900 reads like an epitaph. In April, the Observer newspaper reported Foster’s revealing comment that the group’s current students ‘want to do dissertations on moments in which we were participants’, a point that Bois endorses: ‘For our students, we are part of the historical record.’ There is some irony in this. All four, but particularly Buchloh, are staunch advocates of the idea of the avant-garde as resistance and critique. Today, however, the authors of Art Since 1900 have long since established themselves as eminent members of the (academic) establishment. Perhaps this accounts for the book’s occasional tone of professorial hauteur. The brief suggestions for further reading that appear at the end of each chapter, for instance, are dominated by their own works, especially in the earlier chapters, and by the writings of their students, collaborators and friends. Foster et al. do not even pretend to be objective or inclusive, which of course may not necessarily be a bad thing.
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