Man Ray, African Art, and the Modernist Lens
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Man Ray, African Art, and the Modernist Lens

Wendy A. Grossman

Exhibition
Fall 2009 Symposium

Table of Contents

The Networked Wilderness


$39.95 paper
ISBN: 978-0-8166-7017-8



 

Analyzes modernist photography and the life of objects

This groundbreaking analysis spotlights a select group of Man Ray’s photographs within the context of modernist photographic history and the “discovery” of African art by the early twentieth-century avant-garde. Featuring more than seventy photographs by Man Ray—some never before reproduced—alongside many rarely seen photographs of African art by his European and American contemporaries, Man Ray, African Art, and the Modernist Lens uncovers a virtually unknown chapter in both the inventive activities of this celebrated artist and in this overlooked facet of photographic history.

Meticulously researched and compellingly presented, Wendy A. Grossman raises thought-provoking questions about the role photographs played in shaping perceptions of African art and, in turn, how such images led to distinctive modernist viewpoints across racial and geographic boundaries. Particularly notable is the treatment of the African pieces both as integral components of the modernist history to which they contributed and, as elucidated by groundbreaking scholarship by African art experts, objects with their own independent cultural histories.

Revealing a more complex engagement with African art by Man Ray and his contemporaries than has been previously known, Grossman provides a rich and nuanced study that makes an important addition to our understanding of critical issues in modernism that continue to influence the way we see African art today.

Man Ray, African Art and the Modernist Lens single-handedly resuscitates the photograph as a critical and almost completely overlooked medium in promoting the popularity and understanding of l'art nègre for a western audience. The monumental studies of Robert Goldwater and William Rubin—comprehensive and engaging though they may have been—overlooked the influential role played by the photograph in this context, a regrettable lacunae this endeavor seeks to fulfill. Not only does this exhibition and catalogue complete a chapter in our understanding of Man Ray's work, but its cross-cultural approach allows us to see how the medium of photography influenced the infusion and comprehension of African and other non-western arts in the west, not only among artists, but by the general public as well.” —Francis M. Naumann, author of Conversion to Modernism: The Early Work of Man Ray

Wendy A. Grossman is an independent scholar and curator of the exhibition this catalogue accompanies. Her articles on Man Ray and modernist photography have been published internationally and translated into French and German.

200 pages | 282 b&w illustrations | 9 x 11 3/4 | 2009

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Directors' Forewords | Dorothy Kosinski, Anthony Shelton
Lenders to the Exhibition
Acknowledgements
Preface
Maps

Introduction: Objects and Images
I. African Art Between the Modern and the “Primitive”
II. African Art “American Style”
III. Between Art and Document: African Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
IV. From Dada to Surrealism and Beyond
V. The Poetics and Politics of Surrealism
VI. Out of Phantom Africa: Michel Leiris, Man Ray and the Dogon | Ian Walker
VII. Fashioning a Popular Reception



 
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