TY - BOOK AU - Drucker,Johanna TI - Theorizing modernism: visual art and the critical tradition T2 - Interpretations in art SN - 0231080824 AV - N6465.M63 D78 1994 U1 - 700.1 20 PY - 1994///] CY - New York PB - Columbia University Press KW - Modernism (Art) KW - Art, Modern KW - 19th century KW - 20th century N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Acknowledgments --; 1; Reviewing Modernism: An Introduction --; 2; The Representation of Modern Life: From Space to Spectacle --; The Image of Modernity as Urban Space --; Baudelaire and Guys --; Benjamin --; Manet --; Clark and Pollock --; Specularity, Espace, and Visual Truth --; Cubism, the Specular Surface, and the Visual Sign --; Spectacle and Simulacrum --; 3; The Ontology of the Object --; Early Formalism and Flatness: Manet --; Fry/Bell/Cezanne --; Presentation Rhetoric --; Codifying Formalism Critically and Historically --; Presence into Presentness --; Beyond Formalism: The Parergon --; Contingencies of Value --; 4; Subjectivity and Modernity --; Models of the Artist as Producing Subject --; Picasso --; Duchamp --; Benjamin/Barthes/Foucault --; Judd/Warhol/Acconci --; Levine/Prince 235 --; The Produced Subject of Artistic Enunciation --; Decentering the Subject: Representational Disunity --; The Critical-Paranoiac Method: Dali --; The Schizophrenic: Jameson and the Perpetual Present --; Abstract Space and Subject Enunciation --; Theatricalization of Subjectivity --; The Situation of Enunciation and Vampiristic Subject --; Complicity and Instability of Rendered Positions --; 5; Following the Received Tradition: A Note in Conclusion --; Notes --; Index N2 - Theorizing Modernism is a rereading of the modernist tradition in the visual arts that provides a unique view of the history of modern art and art criticism through a psychoanalytic and poststructuralist stance. Concentrating on canonical critical texts and images, the book examines modern art through a rhetoric of representation rather than through formalist criticism or the history of the avant-garde; Three themes organize the work: attitudes toward the space - social, literal, and metaphorical - of modernism as representation; assumptions about the ontology of the object (from aesthetic formalism to deconstructionist interpretation); and theories of the production of subjectivity (from artist and viewer to subject position); The first section reviews the spatial metaphors used to describe modern life, from Baudelaire on the work of Constantin Guys, through Jean Baudrillard on the paintings of Peter Halley. The second section examines the writings of such modernist critics as Clive Bell, Roger Fry, and Clement Greenberg on the object as a formalist construction; The final section explores concepts of the artist as a producing subject and of the viewer as a produced subject with respect to such artists as Pablo Picasso, Marcel Duchamp, Andy Warhol, and Sherrie Levine; This book is a major contribution to the study of modern art history. Theorizing Modernism, in Professor Drucker's words, "is not an analysis of modern visual culture, nor of modernity through the visual arts. It is a study of the changing strategies of visual arts and critical writing according to a rhetoric of representation through three themes that examine concerns central to the cultural production known as modern art." ER -