Call for papers: “Postwar – Art between the Pacific
and the Atlantic, 1945-1965″

Call for papers: “Postwar – Art between the Pacific
and the Atlantic, 1945-1965″

Haus der Kunst

Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937. Oil on canvas, 349.3 x 776.6 cm. Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia. Exhibition view, Haus der Kunst, Munich 1955. Photo: Stadtarchiv, München. © Succession Picasso / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2013).
October 30, 2013
Call for papers: “Postwar – Art between the Pacific and the Atlantic, 1945-1965″

Haus der Kunst
Prinzregentenstrasse 1
D-80538 Munich

T +49 (0)89 21127 113
F +49 (0)89 21127 157
[email protected]

www.hausderkunst.de

The terms postwar, post-colonialism and post-communism describe the historical conditions under which the world has developed since 1945. As individual subjects of art historical inquiry and analysis, they represent a three-part, long-term research and exhibition project that is being developed by Haus der Kunst and international institutional partners across eight years of research. The purpose of the research project is to bring together leading and emerging scholars, historians, artists, curators, theorists, and students to examine the artistic forces and cultural legacies that have shaped the production of art since 1945.

Conceived as an in-depth study of the postwar period, this first iteration of the project “Postwar – Art between the Pacific and Atlantic, 1945-1965,” is planned to open at Haus der Kunst in early 2016 and subsequently at Tate Modern. The exhibition shifts the focus away from the Western/European vantage point and redirects attention to the polyphonic and multifocal examination of art since 1945. “Postwar” therefore seeks to understand the complex legacies of artistic practice and art historical discourses that emerged globally in the aftermath of World War II’s devastation. Through the vital relationship between art works and artists, produced and understood from the perspectives of international, regional, and local contexts, the research and exhibition will trace artistic developments in the first twenty years after the war by following the sweeping lines of the two oceans across Europe, Asia, the Pacific Rim, Africa, the Mediterranean, North America, and South America. Probing differing concepts of artistic modernity such as abstraction, realism, figuration, and representation, the project will explore how receptions and formulations of modernism informed the manifestation of specific variants of modern art. By following these lines, “Postwar” straddles continents, political structures, economic patterns, and institutional frameworks. Alert to the political and cultural implications of both the Atlantic and Pacific, the diachronic axis of the project’s research scope stretches from Germany to Japan as representatives of the Atlantic and Pacific hemispheres.

As part of the research and exhibition project, a broad spectrum of events, conferences, and publications have been planned of which the “Postwar – Art between the Pacific and Atlantic, 1945-1965″ symposium is the first. Convened at the Haus der Kunst in collaboration with the Tate Modern in 22–24 May 2014, the symposium is an attempt to reconsider and re-examine the two decades following World War II. If we are to remap the cartographies of postwar modernism, what sort of methodologies might we deploy? How, we might ask, were radical aesthetics iterated and to what extent did the political exert pressure on the aesthetic, the cultural on the artistic? In turn, how did artists, critics, and intellectuals negotiate, resist, or even subvert political ideologies? How were artistic practices and aesthetic frameworks re-construed in dispersed political and cultural contexts, especially in response to hegemonic paradigms? Conversely, how did artistic and intellectual movements from the former colonial peripheries impact the terrains of modernism? How then did the circulation of art, objects, discourses, and ideas shape the global contours of postwar modernism? What, if any, were the connections between form and context in the postwar world?

The symposium (22–24 May 2014) welcomes papers that draw on new and original research to address any aspect of these questions through specific case studies or by adopting a comparative approach. Please submit a 500-word paper proposal and a two-page CV to [email protected] by December 15, 2013. Symposium participants will also have the opportunity to submit their papers for inclusion in an edited volume, which will join a cluster of publications, both in print and online, that have been planned around the “Postwar – Art between the Pacific and Atlantic, 1945-1965″ research and exhibition project.

Currently on view at Haus der Kunst:

Richard Artschwager!
October 11–January 19, 2014

DER ÖFFENTLICHKEIT – VON DEN FREUNDEN HAUS DER KUNST
Manfred Pernice, Tutti IV
October 18, 2013–September 21, 2014

Lorna Simpson
October 25–February 2, 2014

So Much I Want to Say: From Annemiek to Mother Courage
The Goetz Collection at Haus der Kunst
April 19, 2013–January 12, 2014

 

Coming soon at Haus der Kunst:

Festival of Independents
Munich / Now / Here
November 15–December 1

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