{"title":"Reconstructing Cold War Cultural Diplomacy Exhibitions","authors":"J. McComas","doi":"10.54533/stedstud.vol002.art07","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"As museum and exhibition histories have become significant subjects of art historical investigation in recent decades, museums themselves have subjected some of the most groundbreaking and controversial exhibitions of the twentieth century to reevaluation through elaborate reconstructions. These restaged exhibitions can shed new light on the shifting boundaries of the canon, question long-accepted art historical interpretations, and provide insight into the intersection of art and politics. Restaged exhibitions, however, are not simply exercises in historical research, but often serve as commentary on contemporary issues. A relevant example is the 1991–1992 exhibition ‘Degenerate Art’: The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany, a reconstruction of the 1937 Nazi propaganda exhibition Degenerate Art.[1] Organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the restaged exhibition introduced late-twentieth-century American audiences to the cultural censorship practiced by the Third Reich at a time when the withholding of federal funding for controversial art was being hotly debated in the United States.[2] It also helped to revive interest in the issue of Nazi art looting, which is now a major subject of research within European and North American museums. Reconstructed exhibitions also focus attention on how and why certain art forms have become canonical. This was the case with the New-York Historical Society’s 2013 exhibition The Armory Show at 100: Modern Art and Revolution, a partial reconstruction of the 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art.[3] Better known as the Armory Show, this exhibition, held in New York City in February and March 1913, is lauded for introducing European avant-garde art to American audiences and setting the stage for its eventual entry into the canon in the United States. The majority of critics in 1913, however, condemned the Armory Show, perceiving the fauvist and cubist works on display as anarchic, ugly, and even immoral. Revisiting the exhibition a century later allowed for reflection on our changing artistic preferences as new forms of art transition from shock-inducing to canonical. As Ken Johnson of the New York Times noted in his exhibition review of October 10, 2013, “now that the Cubists and the Fauves are museum-certified old masters, it takes some imagination to comprehend what made the Armory Show such a controversial sensation.”","PeriodicalId":143043,"journal":{"name":"Stedelijk Studies Journal","volume":"30 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Stedelijk Studies Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.54533/stedstud.vol002.art07","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
As museum and exhibition histories have become significant subjects of art historical investigation in recent decades, museums themselves have subjected some of the most groundbreaking and controversial exhibitions of the twentieth century to reevaluation through elaborate reconstructions. These restaged exhibitions can shed new light on the shifting boundaries of the canon, question long-accepted art historical interpretations, and provide insight into the intersection of art and politics. Restaged exhibitions, however, are not simply exercises in historical research, but often serve as commentary on contemporary issues. A relevant example is the 1991–1992 exhibition ‘Degenerate Art’: The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany, a reconstruction of the 1937 Nazi propaganda exhibition Degenerate Art.[1] Organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the restaged exhibition introduced late-twentieth-century American audiences to the cultural censorship practiced by the Third Reich at a time when the withholding of federal funding for controversial art was being hotly debated in the United States.[2] It also helped to revive interest in the issue of Nazi art looting, which is now a major subject of research within European and North American museums. Reconstructed exhibitions also focus attention on how and why certain art forms have become canonical. This was the case with the New-York Historical Society’s 2013 exhibition The Armory Show at 100: Modern Art and Revolution, a partial reconstruction of the 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art.[3] Better known as the Armory Show, this exhibition, held in New York City in February and March 1913, is lauded for introducing European avant-garde art to American audiences and setting the stage for its eventual entry into the canon in the United States. The majority of critics in 1913, however, condemned the Armory Show, perceiving the fauvist and cubist works on display as anarchic, ugly, and even immoral. Revisiting the exhibition a century later allowed for reflection on our changing artistic preferences as new forms of art transition from shock-inducing to canonical. As Ken Johnson of the New York Times noted in his exhibition review of October 10, 2013, “now that the Cubists and the Fauves are museum-certified old masters, it takes some imagination to comprehend what made the Armory Show such a controversial sensation.”
近几十年来,随着博物馆和展览历史成为艺术史研究的重要主题,博物馆本身也通过精心重建,对20世纪一些最具开创性和争议性的展览进行了重新评估。这些重新上演的展览可以为不断变化的经典边界提供新的视角,质疑长期接受的艺术史解释,并提供对艺术与政治交叉点的洞察。然而,重新举办的展览不仅仅是历史研究的练习,而且往往是对当代问题的评论。一个相关的例子是1991-1992年的展览“堕落艺术”:纳粹德国前卫艺术的命运,重建1937年纳粹宣传展览“堕落艺术”。[1]由洛杉矶县艺术博物馆组织,重新编排的展览向二十世纪后期的美国观众介绍了第三帝国实行的文化审查制度,当时美国正在激烈讨论扣留联邦资金用于有争议的艺术。[2]它还有助于重新唤起人们对纳粹艺术品掠夺问题的兴趣,这个问题现在是欧洲和北美博物馆的一个主要研究课题。重建的展览还关注某些艺术形式如何以及为什么成为规范。纽约历史学会2013年的展览《军械库展览100周年:现代艺术与革命》就是这样,这是1913年国际现代艺术展览的部分重建。[3]1913年2月至3月在纽约举行的这次展览更广为人知的名字是“军械库展”(Armory Show),它因向美国观众介绍欧洲前卫艺术而受到称赞,并为其最终进入美国的经典艺术奠定了基础。然而,1913年的大多数评论家谴责军械库展览,认为展出的野兽派和立体派作品是无政府主义的,丑陋的,甚至是不道德的。一个世纪后,当我们重新审视这个展览时,我们可以反思我们不断变化的艺术偏好,因为新的艺术形式从令人震惊的转变到规范的转变。正如《纽约时报》(New York Times)的肯·约翰逊(Ken Johnson)在2013年10月10日的展览评论中所指出的那样,“既然立体派和野兽派都是博物馆认证的早期大师,那么要理解军械库展览如此引起争议的原因就需要一些想象力了。”