Protest Art
By (Author) Jessica Lack
Thames & Hudson Ltd
Thames & Hudson Ltd
17th July 2024
18th April 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action
709.04
Paperback
176
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
420g
An essential guide to how the power of art has been harnessed to effect political change across the modern world, from the struggle for universal suffrage to Black Lives Matter.
Here is a well-researched, concise guide to protest art, exploring what happens when artists join forces with radical political movements to foster change. The works and movements discussed emerged at times of great upheaval, war, colonialism, independence and changes of government, and reveal how art and politics have been intertwined throughout the 20th and early 21st centuries.
Jessica Lack adopts an inclusive and international approach, presenting examples from nations and societies around the globe, including: Sylvia Pankhurst's paintings depicting the harsh realities faced by women manual workers in early 1900s Britain; the revolutionary aesthetic created by Emory Douglas for the Black Panthers in the 1960s, which documented and galvanized the campaign for the rights of Black Americans; Nandalal Bose's portrait of Mahatma Gandhi, which became the iconic symbol of the Indian non-violence movement in the 1930s; and the Chilean direct action work that contributed to the collapse of General Pinochet's government.
Each of the nine chapters addresses different ways in which art has been used to effect political transformation, taking in humour and satire, performance and propaganda, art's relationships to institutions, the media, conflict and the state, and its uses as a weapon, a galvanizing force and a way of refusing the status quo. Artistic acts, collectives and movements are examined in their context, revealing how they have influenced other artists and changed the wider political and artistic world.
Spotlights the potency of images' and art's often disruptive, and sometimes effective, role in challenging conventions and established power structures. With a reach toward global inclusivity, epigraphs from artists' manifestos, bold type presentations of key ideas, a glossary, a reading list, and questions for classroom consideration, Protest Art is a provocative and worthy primer for students and interested readers alike.-- "Choice" (11/1/2024 12:00:00 AM)
Jessica Lack is a writer with a focus on modern and contemporary art. Previously art correspondent for the Guardian, her publications include Why Are We 'Artists' 100 World Art Manifestos (2017), Tate Guide to Modern Art Terms (with Simon Wilson, 2008) and Global Art in Thames & Hudson's Art Essentials series (2020).