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Mike Wallace Interviews Marcel Duchamp
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- CONTENTS VII
- A NOTE TO READERS XV
- INTRODUCTION 1
-
1. ART IN A COMMERCIAL WORLD
-
I. ART IN SOCIETY
- Illusions of Disinterest 14
- Marx on Ideology and Art 19
- Avant-Garde and Kitsch 24
- The Artworld 27
- Culture Industry Reconsidered 30
-
II. THE VALUE OF ART
- The Cultural Biography ofThings 32
- Aura 38
- Varieties of Artistic Value in Contemporary Aesthetics 40
- The Production of Belief 42
- The Paradox of Rarity: Photography 47
- Symbolic Meanings of Prices 51
- Art. . . Contemporary of Itself 54
-
2. ARTISTS AND COLLECTORS IN THE MARKET FOR ART
-
I. THE SUPPLY OF AND DEMAND FOR WORKS OF ART
- Two Paradigms of Artistic Activity 58
- Arts Markets 60
-
II. THE NATURE OF THE DEMAND FOR WORKS OF ART
- The Synchronization of Social Change in Europe 65
- Economic Value as the Objectification of Subjective Values 70
- Conspicuous Consumption and Pecuniary Canons of Taste 71
- Collectors and Collecting 75
- Connoisseurs and Experts 78
-
III. THE ARTIST: HOMO ECONOMICUS / FEMINA ECONOMICA
- Art, Honor, and Excellence 81
- Determining Value on the Art Market in the Golden Age 86
- Reference, Deference and Difference 89
- The Trademark Tracey Emin 91
- Notes on the Mythic Being l - lll 95
- Whose Image Is It? 96
-
IV. THE ART MARKET
- Property and Exhibition Rights 98
- Informational Efficiency of the Art Market 103
- The Market for Modern Prints 106
-
3. THE ITALIAN CITY-STATES
- The Culture of Consumption 111
- Conditions of Trade 116
- Italian Artists in Sixteenth-Century England 118
- Leonardo and Leonardism 120
- Marketing 124
- The Market for Paintings in Italy 127
- The Gender and Internationalism of Rosalba Camera 130
- Letters to Isabella Stewart Gardner 134
-
4. ANTWERP
- The Business of Art: Patrons, Clients, and Markets 137
- Marketing Art in Antwerp 139
- Pieter Aertsen's Meat Stall as Contemporary Art 142
- Second Bosch 145
- A Sixteenth-Century Master-Pupil Contract 148
- Exporting Art across the Globe 149
- Trade and Art in Seventeenth-Century Antwerp 152
- Rubens's Studio Practice 154
-
5. AMSTERDAM
- On Brabant Rubbish, Economic Competition, Artistic Rivalry, and the Growth of the Market for Paintings 158
- Cost and Value in Dutch Art 162
- Art Dealers in the Netherlands 166
- Italian Paintings in Holland 169
- Freedom, Art, and Money 172
- Letters to Constantijn Huygens, ca. 1639 176
- Attributions in Auction Catalogs 179
- The Solliciteur-Culturel 181
-
6. GERMANY AND SPAIN
-
I. GERMANY
- The Reformation and the Decline of German Art 186
- Art Auctions in Germany during the Eighteenth Century 189
-
II. SPAIN
- Painting in Spain, 1500-1700 194
- Exploring Markets in Spain and Nueva EspaƱa 198
- Spanish Art and Global Discourse 202
-
7. LONDON
- Picture Consumption in London 205
- The Art Market 208
- England and the Netherlands Compared 212
- Engraving 217
- Hogarth 220
- Portrait Painting as a Business Enterprise 221
- Christie's Auction House 224
- Art Collecting and Victorian Middle-Class Taste 229
- David Thomson and the Goupil Gallery 233
- Whistler and the English Print Market 238
- Roger Fry's Commercial Exhibitions 243
-
8. PARIS
- Gersaint and the Marketing of Art 248
- David and the "Exposition Payante" 252
- Noising Things Abroad 253
- An Italian Patron of French Neo-Classic Art 256
- Circuits of Production, Circuits of Consumption 258
- Dealing in Temperaments 260
- Courbet's Landscapes and Their Market 262
- The Retrospective Exhibition 266
- Entrepreneurial Patronage in Nineteenth-Century France 269
- Ambroise Vollard Correspondence 272
- Vollard's Bronzes 276
- La Peau de I'Ours and Galerie Berthe Weill 277
- The Steins'Early Years in Paris 280
- The Avant-Garde, Order, and the Art Market 284
- Galeries Georges Petit 288
- Painting as a Safe Investment 290
-
9. ART CONSUMPTION IN INDUSTRIAL AMERICA
- Touching Pictures by William Harnett 293
- Winslow Homer as Entrepreneur 297
- J. P. Morgan's Renaissance Bronzes 300
- The Armory Show 304
- Alfred Stieglitz 307
- Diary of an Art Dealer 310
- Vollard 312
- Press Release, Art ofThis Century 312
- The Exhibitions at Art of This Century 313
-
10. NEW YORK
- Artists and Dealers 317
- Mark Rothko 320
- The New York Art Market ca.1960 324
- Clement Greenberg 327
- Mike Wallace Interviews Marcel Duchamp 329
- The Leo Castelli Gallery 332
- Mr. Andy Warhol 333
- The Gutman Letter 335
- Unpublished Notes 337
- Land Artists and Art Markets 342
- Unpackaging Simulationism 346
-
11. THE GLOBAL ART MARKET
- The Art Market in the 1980s 353
- Video Art 357
- Money Is No Object 362
- The Internationalization of the Contemporary Art World 366
- Neo-modernity, Neo-biennalism, Neo-fairism 371
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 375
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 377
- INDEX 389
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- CONTENTS VII
- A NOTE TO READERS XV
- INTRODUCTION 1
-
1. ART IN A COMMERCIAL WORLD
-
I. ART IN SOCIETY
- Illusions of Disinterest 14
- Marx on Ideology and Art 19
- Avant-Garde and Kitsch 24
- The Artworld 27
- Culture Industry Reconsidered 30
-
II. THE VALUE OF ART
- The Cultural Biography ofThings 32
- Aura 38
- Varieties of Artistic Value in Contemporary Aesthetics 40
- The Production of Belief 42
- The Paradox of Rarity: Photography 47
- Symbolic Meanings of Prices 51
- Art. . . Contemporary of Itself 54
-
2. ARTISTS AND COLLECTORS IN THE MARKET FOR ART
-
I. THE SUPPLY OF AND DEMAND FOR WORKS OF ART
- Two Paradigms of Artistic Activity 58
- Arts Markets 60
-
II. THE NATURE OF THE DEMAND FOR WORKS OF ART
- The Synchronization of Social Change in Europe 65
- Economic Value as the Objectification of Subjective Values 70
- Conspicuous Consumption and Pecuniary Canons of Taste 71
- Collectors and Collecting 75
- Connoisseurs and Experts 78
-
III. THE ARTIST: HOMO ECONOMICUS / FEMINA ECONOMICA
- Art, Honor, and Excellence 81
- Determining Value on the Art Market in the Golden Age 86
- Reference, Deference and Difference 89
- The Trademark Tracey Emin 91
- Notes on the Mythic Being l - lll 95
- Whose Image Is It? 96
-
IV. THE ART MARKET
- Property and Exhibition Rights 98
- Informational Efficiency of the Art Market 103
- The Market for Modern Prints 106
-
3. THE ITALIAN CITY-STATES
- The Culture of Consumption 111
- Conditions of Trade 116
- Italian Artists in Sixteenth-Century England 118
- Leonardo and Leonardism 120
- Marketing 124
- The Market for Paintings in Italy 127
- The Gender and Internationalism of Rosalba Camera 130
- Letters to Isabella Stewart Gardner 134
-
4. ANTWERP
- The Business of Art: Patrons, Clients, and Markets 137
- Marketing Art in Antwerp 139
- Pieter Aertsen's Meat Stall as Contemporary Art 142
- Second Bosch 145
- A Sixteenth-Century Master-Pupil Contract 148
- Exporting Art across the Globe 149
- Trade and Art in Seventeenth-Century Antwerp 152
- Rubens's Studio Practice 154
-
5. AMSTERDAM
- On Brabant Rubbish, Economic Competition, Artistic Rivalry, and the Growth of the Market for Paintings 158
- Cost and Value in Dutch Art 162
- Art Dealers in the Netherlands 166
- Italian Paintings in Holland 169
- Freedom, Art, and Money 172
- Letters to Constantijn Huygens, ca. 1639 176
- Attributions in Auction Catalogs 179
- The Solliciteur-Culturel 181
-
6. GERMANY AND SPAIN
-
I. GERMANY
- The Reformation and the Decline of German Art 186
- Art Auctions in Germany during the Eighteenth Century 189
-
II. SPAIN
- Painting in Spain, 1500-1700 194
- Exploring Markets in Spain and Nueva EspaƱa 198
- Spanish Art and Global Discourse 202
-
7. LONDON
- Picture Consumption in London 205
- The Art Market 208
- England and the Netherlands Compared 212
- Engraving 217
- Hogarth 220
- Portrait Painting as a Business Enterprise 221
- Christie's Auction House 224
- Art Collecting and Victorian Middle-Class Taste 229
- David Thomson and the Goupil Gallery 233
- Whistler and the English Print Market 238
- Roger Fry's Commercial Exhibitions 243
-
8. PARIS
- Gersaint and the Marketing of Art 248
- David and the "Exposition Payante" 252
- Noising Things Abroad 253
- An Italian Patron of French Neo-Classic Art 256
- Circuits of Production, Circuits of Consumption 258
- Dealing in Temperaments 260
- Courbet's Landscapes and Their Market 262
- The Retrospective Exhibition 266
- Entrepreneurial Patronage in Nineteenth-Century France 269
- Ambroise Vollard Correspondence 272
- Vollard's Bronzes 276
- La Peau de I'Ours and Galerie Berthe Weill 277
- The Steins'Early Years in Paris 280
- The Avant-Garde, Order, and the Art Market 284
- Galeries Georges Petit 288
- Painting as a Safe Investment 290
-
9. ART CONSUMPTION IN INDUSTRIAL AMERICA
- Touching Pictures by William Harnett 293
- Winslow Homer as Entrepreneur 297
- J. P. Morgan's Renaissance Bronzes 300
- The Armory Show 304
- Alfred Stieglitz 307
- Diary of an Art Dealer 310
- Vollard 312
- Press Release, Art ofThis Century 312
- The Exhibitions at Art of This Century 313
-
10. NEW YORK
- Artists and Dealers 317
- Mark Rothko 320
- The New York Art Market ca.1960 324
- Clement Greenberg 327
- Mike Wallace Interviews Marcel Duchamp 329
- The Leo Castelli Gallery 332
- Mr. Andy Warhol 333
- The Gutman Letter 335
- Unpublished Notes 337
- Land Artists and Art Markets 342
- Unpackaging Simulationism 346
-
11. THE GLOBAL ART MARKET
- The Art Market in the 1980s 353
- Video Art 357
- Money Is No Object 362
- The Internationalization of the Contemporary Art World 366
- Neo-modernity, Neo-biennalism, Neo-fairism 371
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 375
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 377
- INDEX 389