New York Modern: : The Arts and the City - William B. Scott

New York Modern:

The Arts and the City

By: William B. Scott, Peter M. Rutkoff

Paperback | 14 August 2001

At a Glance

Paperback


$80.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $20.19 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 10 to 15 business days

New York City's crowded streets and energetic people, its vast population and enormous extremes of wealth and poverty, its towering buildings and technological marvels have marked it as the quintessential modern city since the turn of the century. Artists in particular identified with New York's newness, believing that it embodied the future and celebrated the excitement of the modern urban lives they both witnessed and led. In New York Modern, William B. Scott and Peter M. Rutkoff explore how the varied features of the urban experience in New York inspired the works of artists such as Isadora Duncan, Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe, Eugene O'Neill, Duke Ellington, Clifford Odets, Elia Kazan, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Jackson Pollock, Merce Cunningham, John Cage, Allen Ginsberg, Arthur Miller, James Baldwin, and Diane Arbus, who together shaped twentieth-century American culture.

In painting, sculpture, photography, film, music, dance, theater, and architecture, New York artists redefined what it meant to be "modern." Rooted in the urban realism of Walt Whitman, Thomas Eakins, and Edith Wharton, New York artists combined the revolutionary ideas and styles of European modernism with vernacular images drawn from American commercial, folk, and popular culture in their attempts to respond to the cacophony of voices and blur of images drawn from the city's bars and cafes, tenements and townhouses, skyscrapers and docks.

Handsomely illustrated and engagingly written, New York Modern documents the impressive collective legacy of New York's artists in capturing the energy and emotions of the urban experience.

Industry Reviews

""In their exceptionally well-researched study, William Scott and Peter Rutkoff explore the centrality of New York City in the development of a vibrant, modern American culture... Their's is a rich and satisfying chronicle of the seemingly impossible, a thorough account of New York cultural life between 1876 and 1976... Scott and Rutkoff capture the vitality of the city as well as the individuals and institutions that made possible a modern, democratic American culture by focusing on the multiple roles that New York City played in the lives of the artists and institutions they investigate.""

More in Regional & National History

65,000 Years : A Short History of Australian Art - Marcia Langton

RRP $79.99

$53.35

33%
OFF
Reagan : His Life and Legend - Max Boot

RRP $74.95

$50.40

33%
OFF
Black Convicts : How slavery shaped Australia - Santilla Chingaipe
HAMAS : The Quest for Power - Beverley Milton-Edwards
Dark Emu : Aboriginal Australia and the Birth of Agriculture - Bruce Pascoe
Unmasking the Killer of the Missing Beaumont Children - Stuart Mullins
Blitzed : Drugs in Nazi Germany - Norman Ohler

RRP $22.99

$21.90

Endurance : Shackleton's Incredible Voyage - Alfred Lansing
Killing for Country - David Marr

RRP $39.99

$35.35

12%
OFF
The Golden Road : How Ancient India Transformed the World - William Dalrymple
Colonialism : A Moral Reckoning - Nigel Biggar

RRP $34.99

$31.75

Meditations : The Annotated Edition - Marcus Aurelius

RRP $49.99

$38.75

22%
OFF
The Cronulla Riots : The Inside Story - Carl Scully & Mark Goodwin

RRP $39.95

$37.95