6.2: Gender as a Cultural Lens, part 1

How Ideas of Gender Shape Culture
Read by Sat Feb 13,
Reading Response due Wed Feb 17,
Guerrilla Girls, Do Women Have To Be Naked To Get Into the Met. Museum?, 1989
Guerrilla Girls (1985–)
Do Women Have To Be Naked To Get Into the Met. Museum?, 1989

Why?

Gender and sex have long been factors when editing culture. For centuries women were barred from markets, educational opportunities, voting, owning land, jobs, histories, voices, and more. Although strides have been made in recent decades, we are far from parity. It is important to look closer at not only the history of discrimination, but to dissect definitions of sex and gender to better understand other forms of discrimination and cultural editing.

Two main voices that you’ll see below belong to Simone de Beauvoir (1909–1986) and Judith Butler (1956–). De Beauvoir’s book The Second Sex (1949) helped spur the feminist movements of the 1950s forward. It outlined how the idea of woman is constructed socially, and that one becomes a woman through performing the roles, actions, and aesthetics that society dictates. Judith Butler built off of de Beauvoir’s ideas with her book Gender Trouble (1990) which posited that not only gender was socially contructed, but sex as well. Butler’s writings are foundational to queer theory and intersectionality.

Understandably, this can be a tricky topic considering how we see and address sex and gender in the Church. These readings are to help you understand world views of these topics. It is up to you to discern between what is of eternal consequence and what is temporal and cultural. It is also important to mention that the way the Church uses the term “gender” and the way that gender theorists use the term are very differently. Church leaders tend to use the terms “sex” and “gender” synonymously. Gender theorists differentiate between the two as you will find in your readings.

Required

Feminisms, Cultural Theory and Popular Culture
Introduction, The Second Sex

Supplementary Readings

Gender Theory
An Introduction to Judith Butler’s Gender Troubles
“Gender is ‘performative.’ It’s based on what we do. It is not part of our nature; we simply act it out. So definitions of masculinity and femininity are constructed, rather than something that comes from within us.”
Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson
“Paglia believes that ‘sexual physiology provides the pattern for our experience of the world.’ She follows Hobbes, Sade, Nietzsche, and Freud in her antifeminist view of (sexual) nature–not culture–as the ultimate determinant of human history and relationships. Society is needed to keep that potentially destructive nature in check; undefeated, however, pagan eroticism still flourishes in Western culture. This large, often aphoristic volume traces pagan, sometimes mythological, archetypes from antiquity through the 19th century. An introductory chapter expounds Paglia’s thesis that Western aesthetics has been Apollonian (sky god)–male, rational; and has repressed its Dionysian (earth god)–female, emotional polarity. Major chapters deal with Italian Renaissance art ("an explosion of sexual personae” in its rebirth of pagan forms), Spenser, Shakespeare, Rousseau, Goethe, Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats, Balzac, Gautier, Baudelaire, Huysmans, the Bronte sisters, Swinburne, Pater, late 19th-century decadent art, Wilde, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, Emerson, Whitman, James, and Dickinson. Paglia’s perceptions are interdisciplinary; a large dose of psychological anthropology is mixed with her literary and cultural criticism.”
What Does ‘Hood Feminism’ Mean For A Pandemic?, Code Switch
“This week on the show, we're talking about race, feminism and COVID-19 with Mikki Kendall. She's the author of the new book Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women that a Movement Forgot, which is about all the ways in which feminists who are women of color—especially black feminists—have a wider agenda than the mainstream, largely white feminist movement.”
Key Issues in Postcolonial Feminism: A Western Perspective, Gender Forum
“Post-colonial feminists are still in the process of contesting the Eurocentric gaze that privileges Western notions of liberation and progress and portrays Third World women primarily as victims of ignorance and restrictive cultures and religions.”
How Pink Became a Color for Girls, Racked
“For most of history, pink was just another color. It was worn equally by men and women. A line in Little Women published in 1869 refers to Amy as tying pink and blue ribbons around two babies to tell the male from the female ‘in the French fashion.’ That’s often cited as a reason pink became affiliated with girls. However, ribbons aside, babies were generally dressed in white, and if you did have twins that needed to be color-coded you didn’t have to go with pink or blue ribbons. A catalogue from 1918 even recommended dressing female babies in blue as it had a ‘much more delicate and dainty tone.’”
Simone de Beauvoir
Dungeons & Dragons & Philosophers III: Ladies’ Night at the Dragon’s Den, Existential Comics
Read the comic, but also the blurbs underneath about each philosopher featured: Philippa Foot, Simone de Beauvoir, G.E.M. Anscombe, Judith Butler, and Hannah Arendt.
An Introduction to Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex
“‘One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.’ Male-dominated society deliberately constructs the idea of femininity to keep men in control.”
The Second Sex
“In 1946, Simone de Beauvoir began to outline what she thought would be an autobiographical essay explaining why, when she had tried to define herself, the first sentence that came to mind was ‘I am a woman.’ That October, my maiden aunt, Beauvoir’s contemporary, came to visit me in the hospital nursery. I was a day old, and she found a little tag on my bassinet that announced, ‘It’s a Girl!’ In the next bassinet was another newborn (‘a lot punier,’ she recalled), whose little tag announced, ‘I’m a Boy!’ There we lay, innocent of a distinction—between a female object and a male subject—that would shape our destinies. It would also shape Beauvoir’s great treatise on the subject. Beauvoir was then a thirty-eight-year-old public intellectual who had been enfranchised for only a year.”
What is Woman? (de Beauvoir + Metroid)
“Simone de Beauvoir, existentialist philosopher, feminist theorist, and author of The Second Sex, may not seem to be a good match for the 1986 Nintendo video game Metroid, but 8-Bit Philosophy, a web series that explains philosophical concepts by way of vintage video games, makes it make sense.”
Simone de Beauvoir: 1975 Interview
“In the 1975 interview with French journalist Jean-Louis Servan-Schreiber—‘Why I’m a Feminist’—De Beauvoir picks up the ideas of The Second Sex, which Servan-Schreiber calls as important an ‘ideological reference’ for feminists as Marx’s Capital is for communists. He asks De Beauvior about one of her most quoted lines: 'One is not born a woman, one becomes one.’ Her reply shows how far in advance she was of post-modern anti-essentialism, and how much of a debt later feminist thinkers owe to her ideas.” (Open Culture)
Feminisms
Feminism in the Light of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, BYU Studies Quarterly
“In its most basic basic form, feminism echoes eternal truths of the gospel, which affirms the equal worth of all people, the equal right to and capacity for spirituality, and the evils of abuse.”
It’s Not (All) the Second Wave’s Fault, Elle
“In 2010, during yet another of these intergenerational scraps, Katha Pollitt complained that the 'new wave’ talk was used ‘to describe each latest crop of feminists—loosely defined as any female with more political awareness than a Bratz doll—and to portray them in terms of their rejection of second wavers, who are supposedly starchy and censorious [. . .] The wave structure,’ she continued, ‘. . . looks historical, but actually it is used to misrepresent history by evoking ancient tropes about repressive mothers and rebellious daughters.’”
What Does ‘Hood Feminism’ Mean For A Pandemic?, Code Switch
“This week on the show, we're talking about race, feminism and COVID-19 with Mikki Kendall. She's the author of the new book Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women that a Movement Forgot, which is about all the ways in which feminists who are women of color—especially black feminists—have a wider agenda than the mainstream, largely white feminist movement.”
Key Issues in Postcolonial Feminism: A Western Perspective, Gender Forum
“Post-colonial feminists are still in the process of contesting the Eurocentric gaze that privileges Western notions of liberation and progress and portrays Third World women primarily as victims of ignorance and restrictive cultures and religions.”
Women Design: Pioneers in Architecture, Industrial, Graphic and Digital Design from the Twentieth Century to the Present Day
“From architects and product designers to textile artists and digital innovators, Women Design profiles a selection of the most dynamic female designers from the modern era, showcasing their finest work and celebrating their enduring influence. Design throughout history has been profoundly shaped and enhanced by the creativity of women; as practitioners, commentators, educators and commissioners. But in a narrative that eagerly promotes their male counterparts, their contributions are all too often overlooked. Through 21 engaging profiles, Women Design rediscovers and revels in the work of pioneers such as Eileen Gray, Lora Lamm and Lella Vignelli, while shining a spotlight on modern-day trailblazers including Kazuyo Sejima, Hella Jongerius and Neri Oxman. Richly illustrated with archival imagery, this is a rare glimpse into the working worlds of some of the most influential forces in contemporary design.”
Women Who Draw
“Women Who Draw is an open directory of female* professional illustrators, artists and cartoonists. It was created by two women artists in an effort to increase the visibility of female illustrators, emphasizing female illustrators of color, LBTQ+, and other minority groups of female illustrators. *Women Who Draw is trans-inclusive and includes women, trans and gender non-conforming illustrators.”
The Role of Women in Design | 12 Designers – 12 Opinions, Graphicart News
“What role are women designers playing in today’s world? Are they taking a more leading role in the design field? Do women and their male counterparts differ in anyway? From a feminist aspect, women and men do not differ in any kind. However, the numbers speak the truth, as we do not find enough women designers in conferences, publications, or as jurors. Is this a reversing trend? Barbara Szaniecki from Brazil, Belen Mena from Ecuador, Benito Cabanas from Mexico, Chris Lozos from United States, Gitte Kath from Denmark, Jamila Varawala from India, Lygia Santiago from Brazil, Maria Mercedes Salgado from Ecuador, Marina Córdova Alvéstegui and Susana Machicao both from Bolivia, respectable designers , well known to our community and Veerle Poupeye from Jamaica, Executive Director of the National Gallery of Jamaica, were called to give the role of women in design as they experiences it in their respective countries or just global observations. They came with very interesting points and links for your references.”
Rebecca Wright on the Ratio of Girls with Design Degrees vs. Those in the Industry, It's Nice That
“We often find ourselves discussing the role, and lack of women in the world of graphic design. Rather than try and cackhandedly work it out for ourselves we decided to ask someone at the frontline of the issue to help explain it. Rebecca Wright is programme director of graphic communication design at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London.”
How One Design Agency is Fighting for Feminism, Creative Bloq
“Liam Fay-Fright explains why Mother London joined forces with fashion mag Elle to fight the patriarchy, in the design industry and beyond.”
How Do Tech’s Biggest Companies Compare on Diversity?, The Verge
The Verge created a set of interactive charts that break down diversity at some of the biggest tech comapnies: Apple, Google, Twitter, Intel, Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon.
Haus Proud: The Women of Bauhaus, The Guardian
“More women than men applied to the school in 1919, and Gropius insisted that there would be ‘no difference between the beautiful and the strong sex’—those very words betraying his real views. Those of the 'strong sex’ were, in fact, marked out for painting, carving and, from 1927, the school’s new architecture department. The 'beautiful sex’ had to be content, mostly, with weaving.”
Invisible Women, 99% Invisible

“Even when women are the focus of design, their actual needs are still sometimes ignored. Consider the three-stone stove, a traditional cooking mechanism used by 80% of people in the developing world. It is a simple device consisting of three stones with a fire underneath and a pot above. This stove not terribly efficient and is often placed in poorly ventilated rooms, exposing women in particular to the equivalent of multiple packs of cigarettes per day worth of harmful smoke. Alternatives have been developed by well-meaning groups, but adoption has been slow, in part because many designers have simply failed to consult the actual women for whom they are designing.”

Invisible Women

“Welcome to the Gender Data Gap. Our world is largely built for and by men, in a system that can ignore half the population. This book will tell you how and why this matters In her new book, Invisible Women, award-winning campaigner and writer Caroline Criado Perez shows us how, in a world largely built for and by men, we are systematically ignoring half the population. She exposes the gender data gap - a gap in our knowledge that is at the root of perpetual, systemic discrimination against women, and that has created a pervasive but invisible bias with a profound effect on women's lives. Caroline brings together for the first time an impressive range of case studies, stories and new research from across the world that illustrate the hidden ways in which women are excluded from the very building blocks of the world we live in, and the impact this has on their health and wellbeing. From government policy and medical research, to technology, workplaces, urban planning and the media - Invisible Women exposes the biased data that excludes women. In making the case for change, this powerful and provocative book will make you see the world anew.”

What Does a Feminist Graphic Design History in the United States Look Like?, Alphabettes

“It is my hope that this digital collection can be considered a humble contribution to the ongoing feminist effort in design. There are multiple limits in this collection. There is a disturbing lack of literature on women’s impact in the history of graphic design, independently of their background.”

This is part one of a four-part series.

Response Questions

Remember to cite specific instances from the text to support your views.

  • What are the issues around discussing only a singular feminism?
  • According to Butler, the question of “the subject” of feminism is crucial for politics, and for feminist politics in particular. How and why?
  • As with any issue of an “other” or a power struggle, would it be more advantageous to force the existing structures to accept the marginalized, or for the marginalized to create their own structures that are more inclusive? Why? Can you think of examples?
  • What is of eternal consequence here, and what is cultural and temporal? Support your views.

6.1: Platforms, Distribution, and Display As Cultural Lenses

How Reproductions, Photographs, Museums, Publications, Television and the Internet Shape Culture and Visual Literacy
Read by Thu Feb 11,
Reading Response due Wed Feb 17,
Joseph Kosuth (1945–), One and Three Chairs, 1965
Joseph Kosuth (1945–)
One and Three Chairs, 1965
Wood folding chair, mounted photograph of a chair, and mounted photographic enlargement of the dictionary definition of “chair”
Chair 32 3/8 x 14 7/8 × 20 7/8″ (82 x 37.8 × 53 cm), photographic panel 36 × 24 1/8″ (91.5 × 61.1 cm), text panel 24 × 30″ (61 × 76.2 cm)
Larry Aldrich Foundation Fund
© 2020 Joseph Kosuth / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, Courtesy of the artist and Sean Kelly Gallery, New York

Why?

One of the primary concern’s of Benjamin’s “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” (below) is how the nature of artwork and its place in society has changed when photographic reproductions have become more ubiquitous. What did it mean when you could see an image of an artwork, but never see the original work? Does the original serve a purpose at that point? He wrote this about 80 years ago, before broadcast television had taken a strong hold, well before the internet and social media, and before commercial printing did a good job of handling color images. While you are reading his essay, think about how these concepts have aged and how they might apply to contemporary life. Benjamin’s essay was the basis for John Berger’s Ways of Seeing that you will watch afterwards. Berger’s video updates some of Benjamin’s ideas and makes them a bit more accessible.

Along the lines of Benjamin’s and Berger’s thinking about reproductions, publications (magazines, books, websites), galleries, and museums all form distribution channels and contexts for images. Asking how those platforms that display and distribute images shape our understanding of art, determine what qualifies as art/design, and act as gatekeepers of “quality” is important. Consider the limitations of these platforms and the things that influence them—technology, money, politics, sexism, racism, and so on.

Required

The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
Ways of Seeing, episode 1

Ways of Seeing (1972), 30:01, by John Berger

Supplementary Readings

Benjamin & Adorno

Walter Benjamin and Theodor Adorno were both part of the Frankfurt School, but their ideas were often at odds. They function as effective foils to each other to help understand the others’ strengths and limitations.

The Naysayers: Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and the Critique of Pop Culture, The New Yorker
“The worst that one Frankfurt School theorist could say of another was that his work was insufficiently dialectical. In 1938, Adorno said it of Benjamin, who fell into a months-long depression. The word ‘dialectic,’ as elaborated in the philosophy of Hegel, causes endless problems for people who are not German, and even for some who are. In a way, it is both a philosophical concept and a literary style. Derived from the ancient Greek term for the art of debate, it indicates an argument that maneuvers between contradictory points. It 'mediates,’ to use a favorite Frankfurt School word. And it gravitates toward doubt, demonstrating the 'power of negative thinking,’ as Herbert Marcuse once put it. Such twists and turns come naturally in the German language, whose sentences are themselves plotted in swerves, releasing their full meaning only with the final clinching action of the verb.”
ENGL 300: Introduction to Theory of Literature: Lecture 17 – The Frankfurt School of Critical Theory
“This first lecture on social theories of art and artistic production examines the Frankfurt School. The theoretical writings of Theodor Adorno and Walter Benjamin are explored in historical and political contexts, including Marxism, socialist realism, and late capitalism. The concept of mechanical reproduction, specifically the relationship between labor and art, is explained at some length. Adorno’s opposition to this argument, and his own position, are explained. The lecture concludes with a discussion of Benjamin’s perspective on the use of distraction and shock in the process of aesthetic revelation.”
The Culture Industry: Selected Essays on Mass Culture
“The creation of the Frankfurt School of critical theory in the 1920s saw the birth of some of the most exciting and challenging writings of the twentieth century. It is out of this background that the great critic Theodor Adorno emerged. His finest essays are collected here, offering the reader unparalleled insights into Adorno’s thoughts on culture. He argued that the culture industry commodified and standardized all art. In turn this suffocated individuality and destroyed critical thinking. At the time, Adorno was accused of everything from overreaction to deranged hysteria by his many detractors. In today’s world, where even the least cynical of consumers is aware of the influence of the media, Adorno’s work takes on a more immediate significance. The Culture Industry is an unrivalled indictment of the banality of mass culture.”
Aesthetic Theory
“Perhaps the most important aesthetics of the twentieth century appears here newly translated, in English that is for the first time faithful to the intricately demanding language of the original German. The culmination of a lifetime of aesthetic investigation, Aesthetic Theory is Theodor W. Adorno’s magnum opus, the clarifying lens through which the whole of his work is best viewed, providing a framework within which his other major writings cohere.”
The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility, and Other Writings on Media
“Benjamin’s essay ‘Work of Art’ sets out his boldest thoughts on media and on culture in general. It is collected here with other essays, as he tackles film, radio, photography, and the modern transformations of literature and painting.”
Dialectic of Elightenment
“One of the core texts of Critical Theory, Dialectic of Enlightenment explores the socio-psychological status quo that had been responsible for what the Frankfurt School considered the failure of the Age of Enlightenment. Together with The Authoritarian Personality (1950; also co-authored by Adorno) and Frankfurt School member Herbert Marcuse’s One-Dimensional Man (1964), it has had a major effect on 20th-century philosophy, sociology, culture, and politics, inspiring especially the New Left of the 1960s and 1970s” (text from Wikipedia)
The Work of Art in the Age of the Internet, Hyperallergic
“In March of 2020, however, art displays everywhere suddenly changed. (Of course the entire culture has also been transformed, but I discuss only the art world.) This change had nothing to do with leftist politics or the development of novel art forms. Right now the only way to see art exhibitions in museums or in galleries is online. Without leaving my study I visit art shows anywhere in virtual displays.”
Walter Benjamin: The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
“An introduction to the art critic Walter Benjamin and his most influential essay, the Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. Including David Douglas's the Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction.”
Marxisms: The Frankfurt School, Althusserianism, Hegemony, and Post-Marxism, Cultural Theory and Popular Culture
I know this is a long slog for this one, but there is a really good and succinct (despite its length) overview of the different facets of Marxism. Stick with it and do your best to understand the different terms and ideas.
Reproduction/Copies
Who am I? A Philosophical Inquiry, TED-Ed
“Throughout the history of mankind, the subject of identity has sent poets to the blank page, philosophers to the agora and seekers to the oracles. These murky waters of abstract thinking are tricky to navigate, so it’s probably fitting that to demonstrate the complexity, the Greek historian Plutarch used the story of a ship. Amy Adkins illuminates Plutarch’s Ship of Theseus.”
Lascaux Paintings and the Taco Bell Breakfast Menu, The Anthropocene Reviewed
“John Green reviews a 17,000-year-old painting and the Taco Bell breakfast menu.” For our purposes, the section on the Lascaux paintings is the only applicable one and the time indicated is only for that section.
Display/Exhibition Theory
To Bear Witness: Real Talk About White Supremacy Culture in Art Museums Today
“We know very well that art museums are some of the strongest cultural bastions of western colonization. Through very deliberately racist and sexist practices of acquisition, deaccession, exhibition and art historical analysis, museums have decisively produced the very state of exclusion that publicly engaged art historians and curators like me are currently working hard to dismantle. Yet, what we do not speak honestly enough about are the very distinct ways in which racism and sexism are often times utilized to traumatize us and undermine our work — the very work that our respective institutions claim they want and often recruit us to do.”
Notes on the Gallery Space, Inside The White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space
“The ideal gallery subtracts from the artwork all cues that interfere with the fact that it is ‘art.’ The work is isolated from everything that would detract from its own evaluation of itself. This gives the space a presence possessed by other spaces where conventions are preserved through the repetition of a closed system of values. Some of the sanctity of the church, the formality of the courtroom, the mystique of the experimental laboratory joins with chic design to produce a unique chamber of esthetics. So powerful are the perceptual fields of force within this chamber that, once outside it, art can lapse into secular status. Conversely, things become art in a space where powerful ideas about art focus on them.”
Almost One Third of Solo Shows in US Museums go to Artists Represented by Just Five Galleries
“Nearly one-third of the major solo exhibitions held in US museums between 2007 and 2013 featured artists represented by just five galleries, according to research conducted by The Art Newspaper. We analysed nearly 600 exhibitions submitted by 68 museums for our annual attendance-figures survey and found that 30% of prominent solo shows featured artists represented by Gagosian Gallery, Pace, Marian Goodman Gallery, David Zwirner and Hauser & Wirth.”
The Voices of Silence
Note: This books is 661 pages. Read as much of it as you like. I recommend the first chapter: “Museum Without Walls” which jibes nicely with John Berger’s Ways of Seeing—exemplifying how the visual reproduction of art impacts the popularity and how people experience it.
Editor’s Letter, ARTnews
“Global art history requires more than an expanded sense of cultural geography, as Christopher Green contends in an essay about recent exhibitions of Native American art. This fall, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York installed a collection of Native artwork, crafts, and ceremonial objects in the American Wing rather than in the galleries set aside for Indigenous cultures. The move could be interpreted as part of a broader process of decolonization within museums (wall texts acknowledged that the Met sits on Lenape land). But, as Green writes, the museum’s display conventions, geared toward highlighting aesthetic values, also obscure the context and purpose of the artworks.”
How Advocates of African-American Art Are Advancing Racial Equality in the Art World, Artsy
“Only a small group of African Americans occupy curatorial positions at mainstream museums, relatively few African-American artists have been given major solo museum shows, and works by 19th- and 20th-century African-American artists are undervalued by the art market relative to those by white artists of equal standing. Change doesn’t come organically, however. It takes individuals. And there is a contingent of curators, collectors, artists, dealers, and others who are working to advance racial diversity in the art world. We spoke to those with a history of activism around the representation of African-American art in the United States and a younger generation of artists and professionals who are reaping the rewards of their forebears and continuing the movement toward a fairer—and more culturally rich—art world.”
A Study Found That 85% of Artists in U.S. Museum Collections are White, and 87% are Male, Artsy
“The permanent collections of America’s museums are disproportionately male and overwhelmingly white, according to a study published by the Public Library of Science. The study, based on online data from 18 major U.S. museums—including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston—had at its disposal more than 40,000 works by over 10,000 artists.”
Are U.S. Art Museums Finally Taking Latin American Art Seriously?, ARTnews
“It’s in New York, the center of the U.S. art world, where the topic of Latin American art seems to have been most overlooked. In the last decade, the New Museum has had only one solo installation by a Latin American artist (Carlos Motta’s ‘Museum as Hub’ piece in 2012). Over the last eight years, the Whitney Museum has had no surveys that deal with Latino themes and has done only one solo exhibition featuring an artist of Latin American origin … sort of. That’d be the 2007 Gordon Matta-Clark exhibition, ‘You Are the Measure.’ (The artist’s father was born in Chile.)”
To Fight Racism Within Museums, They Need to Stop Acting Like They’re Neutral, Vice
“In April, the Brooklyn Museum hired a white curator, Kristen Windmuller-Luna to oversee its collection of African art. The appointment outraged skeptics who felt that a black curator should oversee the institution’s African objects. Decolonize This Place, a New York activist group, staged a protest occupying the museum’s Beaux-Arts Court and penned a letter publicly accusing the museum of racism and aiding gentrification, demanding prompt change.”
Captivating Cultures: the Politics of Exhibiting, Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices
“The link between visibility and power is rendered most compelling when one considers human subjects and in particular the great spectacles of the colonial period—the national and international exhibitions that were mounted in Great Britain between 1850 and 1925. These exhibitions were notable for a great many things: their promotion of exploration, trade, business interests, commerce; their dependence on adequate rail links, colonial trading networks, and advertising; their launching of now familiar products: Colman’s mustard, Goodyear India rubber and ice cream; their notable effect on the institutionalization of collecting and internalization of commerce. Among these other notable distractions, they provided another type of spectacle: the display of peoples. In this section we will look, very briefly, at ethnographic displays which showed people, not objects.”
Where Does a Work of Art Belong?, Hyperallergic
“But this widening of the canons, so David Joselit argues in his new book, Heritage and Debt: Art in Globalization (MIT Press, 2020), was accompanied by a politically governed marginalization of these non-Western traditions. Only the West, it was claimed, had developed art capable of an ongoing expansion. Other cultures merely provided resources to be exploited. Told this way, the story of art was part and parcel with the rise of Western imperialism. Now, however, ‘art’s globalization,’ he writes, ‘has the potential to redress Western modernism’s cultural dispossession of the global South.’ If countries outside the West can reclaim their heritage, globalization could then become politically liberating.”
The Work of Art in the Age of the Internet, Hyperallergic
“In March of 2020, however, art displays everywhere suddenly changed. (Of course the entire culture has also been transformed, but I discuss only the art world.) This change had nothing to do with leftist politics or the development of novel art forms. Right now the only way to see art exhibitions in museums or in galleries is online. Without leaving my study I visit art shows anywhere in virtual displays.”

Response Questions

Remember to cite specific instances from the text to support your views.

  • What is the importance of the “original” when it comes to art and design? Is this always applicable? Are there areas where the idea of an “original” is not in play?
  • Would you say that the context, or mode of display of an image is as important, less important, or more important than the content of the image itself? How might an image’s context come into play in a magazine? On television? On the internet? In a gallery? In a museum/gallery?