Description
A reassessment of Clement Greenberg's criticism, via Adorno and Merleau-Ponty, which ultimately frames it as a paradigm by which to understand Abstract Expressionism as politically radical.
About the Author
Daniel Neofetou completed his PhD at Goldsmiths in 2018. He has taught at Birkbeck, the University of Edinburgh, the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, and the Fordham University London Center. He is the author of Good Day Today: David Lynch Destabilises the Spectator (2015) and is a regular contributor to Art Monthly and The Wire.
Reviews
In relating Greenberg's post-'Kitsch' and 'Laocoon' writing to Adorno, Neofetou brilliantly grounds the thesis that Abstract Expressionism's determinate negation of content-based (that is, what Adorno calls Inhalt) thinking portends the determinate negation of unfreedom. The book will well service readers already familiar with some of the revisionist literature on Abstract Expressionism and best reward specialists familiar with the more recent responses to these revisionist accounts. * Oxford Art Journal *
The scope and ambitions of Rereading Abstract Expressionism is very different, but also very clear and powerful ... Rereading Abstract Expressionism is an important contribution to the study of abstract expressionism and its one-sided reception in post-Greenbergian years. It is now time to go back to the paintings themselves and to check the validity of his very stimulating new interpretations of the discourses that have "made" abstract expressionism what it was and today no longer is, namely the promise of an absolute and absolutely liberating art. * Leonardo Reviews *
Book Information
ISBN 9781501358388
Author Daniel Neofetou
Format Hardback
Page Count 240
Imprint Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 666g