Historical framing: A myth about the classification of visual art.

Item

Title
Historical framing: A myth about the classification of visual art.
Identifier
AAI9830769
identifier
9830769
Creator
Sutton, Tiffany.
Contributor
Advisers: Mary Wiseman | Marx Wartofsky
Date
1998
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Philosophy | Art History
Abstract
Historical Framing is a myth in the modern philosophical tradition of Anglo-Saxon "state of nature" myths, freshly addressing the controversial questions of whether and how art history should play a role in the contemporary classification of visual art. In the making of the myth, imagination is supported rigorously, with unusual attention to historical development in the visual arts. The myth upholds the variety of objects classified this century as artworks while suggesting a set of classificatory norms more informative about art's specialness in general than the handwaving ceremony of artworlders, familiar to us from institutional theories.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs