Description
Looking at the political significance of cross-cultural encounters refracted through the visual languages of Orientalism, the contributors engage with pressing recent debates about indigenous agency, postcolonial identity, and gendered subjectivities. The very range of artists, styles, and forms discussed in this collection broadens contemporary understandings of Orientalist art. Among the artists considered are the Algerian painters Azouaou Mammeri and Mohammed Racim; Turkish painter Osman Hamdi; British landscape painter Barbara Bodichon; and the French painter Henri Regnault. From the liminal "Third Space" created by mosques in postcolonial Britain to the ways nineteenth-century harem women negotiated their portraits by British artists, the essays in this collection force a rethinking of the Orientalist canon.
This innovative volume will appeal to those interested in art history, theories of gender, and postcolonial studies.
Contributors. Jill Beaulieu, Roger Benjamin, Zeynep Celik, Deborah Cherry, Hollis Clayson, Mark Crinson, Mary Roberts
A collection of essays that develop ways of doing postcolonial studies in art history.
About the Author
Jill Beaulieu is an independent art historian and past President of the Art Association of Australia.
Mary Roberts is the John Schaeffer Lecturer in British Art at the University of Sydney. They are coeditors (with Toni Ross) of Refracting Vision: Essays on the Writings of Michael Fried.
Reviews
"Focusing largely on the conjunction of Orientalism and pictorial representation, a still underexamined area, Orientalism's Interlocutors contributes new understanding to the concepts of Orientalism and colonial discourses."-Julie Codell, coeditor of Orientalism Transposed: The Impact of the Colonies on British Culture
"This collection of essays makes a significant contribution to what is becoming a truly major debate. It advances the latest thinking about the processes of cultural interaction between East and West by viewing such 'interlocutions' as being much more of a dialogue through which indigenous identities can be formed and asserted."-John MacKenzie, author of Orientalism: History, Theory, and the Arts
Book Information
ISBN 9780822328742
Author Jill Beaulieu
Format Paperback
Page Count 244
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press
Weight(grams) 399g