login   password  artist portfolio  gallery portfolio  MYabsolutearts 
absolutearts.com
 
help   |  media kit   |  about us   |  services   |  contact  
  NEWEST TRENDS                .   SEARCH   .   BUY   .   JOIN   .   COLLECT   .   RESEARCH   .   READ  .   DISCUSS  
Indepth Arts News:

"Conflict and Art"
2006-06-07 until 2006-08-27
Cantor Arts Center Stanford University
Stanford, CA, USA United States of America

As society copes with conflicts ranging from the global to personal, the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University examines how artists in many cultures and eras have interpreted the harsh realities of conflict through objects and images that are aesthetically satisfying. The exhibition Conflict and Art, on view June 7 through August 27, 2006, surveys a spectrum of artists' responses to conflicts from war to solitary quests. Selections from the Cantor Arts Center collections bring together art from Europe, North America, Africa, and Asia for this exhibition. Conflict and Art challenges curators to present diverse works in a new context to address common themes.

The exhibition's broad thematic headings range from societal, religious, and political struggles, with their associated wars, to more individualistic competitions and internal dialogues, often eloquently drawn from legend or literature: Political and social changes are reflected in art, including issues stemming from the rise of democracy, advances in science, and the growing awareness of societal ills.

War and its consequences have provided compelling subjects for artists throughout history. The abundance of objects used in war and works commemorating victory and valor indicate the primacy of war-related activity by virtually every culture. Legend and literature, particularly scenarios and plots fraught with conflict, have long inspirited artists. Beliefs worldwide have fueled the fervor of spiritual practitioners and imagination of artists. Competitive sports, while positive and possibly a sublimating aspect of conflict, provide scenes of duels, bullfights, wrestling, and boxing. Individual questsreflect the “human condition,” with conflict and resolution, overcoming pitfalls, and seeking harmony. Artists have portrayed such internal conflicts, often their own, in many forms.

Conflict and Art presents works spanning six centuries by unknown makers to acclaimed artists, including Robert Arneson, Albrecht Durer, Theodore Gericault, Francisco Goya, Kathe Kollwitz, Eadweard Muybridge, Auguste Rodin, Pablo Picasso, Masami Teraoka, Andy Warhol, and Tsukioka Yoshitoshi. Their works are juxtaposed with such objects as an African ritual figure, an American Indian knife sheath, a shield from Borneo, and a Japanese samurai’s sword. These cross-cultural comparisons are intended to elucidate the complexity and relevance of this subject.

The exhibition and its related programs are made possible by the Clumeck Endowment Fund and Cantor Arts Center members.

IMAGE
John Steuart Curry
John Brown
1939
Lithograph
Cantor Arts Center


Related Links:


 
Call for Artists : Community Arts Initiative - The Artist Project - Museum of Fine Art Boston


Alexis Harding : Bi-product Depositories - Mummery + Schnelle Gallery


der PROZESS : hunchentoot goes out 2 - Enda Odonoghue to Take Part - hunchentoot Galerie


INTIMACY AND DESECRATION : The Body, Gender and Identity - CACT - centro d'arte contemporanea ticino


Mark Edward Harris : The Art of the Japanese Bath - Kopeikin Gallery


Call for Artists : 13th Annual Subtle Technologies Festival Explores Sustainability - Subtle Technologies, University of Toronto


Art in Mind : Work by Natalia O'Neill - Brick Lane Gallery


The Ione Citrin Collection - Poway Center for the Performing Arts Gallery


Parallel Realities : Aishan Yu's First Solo Show in the UK - Peifen Fine Art


Secrets and Confessions : Peter Sudar, John Stark, Leonard Vartic, Ioan Cristea - Ana Cristea Gallery


 

indepth arts search:     
 
Free Arts News Subscription | Browse the Arts | Artist Portfolios | International Arts News | Arts News Archive | Privacy Policy