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Unknown Facts About Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985 - MOCATheir work across mediums specifically stimulates a pluralistic selection of sources from Islamic architectural decoration to American quilts, wallpaper design, Persian carpets, and Japanese Imari ware ceramics. Pattern and Decoration's maximalist, diverse citation of all things ornamental flew in the face of the reductive, cool visual appeals of minimalism, modernist aspirations to purity and self-reflexivity, and conceptual art's demotion of the handmade. ![]() Formed and driven in big part by feminism and the advancement of feminist art historic techniques that demystified the logic and rhetoric of value assignation, Pattern and Decoration artists comprehended modernism as a puritanical art of exclusionof gradually stripping away or leaving out kinds and materials considered extraneousand looked for to create an art based on both visual and political concepts of inclusion. Though little studied today, the Pattern and Design motion was institutionally acknowledged, critically gotten, and commercially successful from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s. The overwhelming preponderance of craft-based practices and unabashedly ornamental sensibilities in art of the contemporary indicate an influential tradition that is ripe for consideration. About Did you see this? : The 328-page exhibit catalogue, With Satisfaction: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 19721985, is modified by Anna Katz, and features seven freshly commissioned essays by Katz, Elissa Auther, Alex Kitnick, Rebecca Skafsgaard Lowery, Kayleigh Perkov, Sarah-Neel Smith, and Hamza Walker, along with artist bios, a bibliography, an exhibition history, and reprints of historically substantial works. Some Known Factual Statements About Decoration Policies - Housing and Residence Life, U.Va.Created by Green Dragon Workplace, the catalogue is published by MOCA, in association with Yale University Press. Artist List: Neda Alhilali (b. 1938, Cheb, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic); lives in Los Angeles) Emma Amos (b. 1938, Atlanta; d. 2020, Bedford, New Hampshire) Ralph Bacerra (b. 1938, Garden Grove, California; d. 2008, Los Angeles) Tony Bechara (b. ![]() 1941, Lake Charles, Louisiana; lives in New york city; Santa Fe, New Mexico; and Ahmedabad, India) Billy Al Bengston (b. 1934, Dodge City, Kansas; lives in Venice, California, and Honolulu) Cynthia Carlson (b. 1942, Chicago; lives in New York) Lia Cook (b. 1942, Ventura, California; lives in Berkeley, California) Brad Davis (b. 1942, Duluth, Minnesota; lives in New York) Merion Estes (b. |
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