This carefully researched book offers a dynamic and expansive Deweyan
vision for the arts and education. This (re)vision acknowledges the
influence on Dewey’s aesthetics of art collector and educator Albert
Barnes, while also exploring the various ways Dewey’s writings on
the arts, in moving beyond Barnes’ "scientific aesthetic method,"
were an important resource for many innovative twentieth-century
American artists, art movements, and arts-related educational
institutions. Neither Barnes’ influence on Dewey nor the features of
Dewey’s naturalistic aesthetics that made his Art as Experience a
favorite text of many artists and arts practitioners have been fully
and adequately acknowledged in existing literature on Dewey’s
thinking about the arts and education. This book effectively remedies
that situation. "Granger clarifies, advances, and augments a broad and
open-ended ‘Deweyan vision of the arts and education.’ Enlivened
on almost every page by concrete historical and contemporary examples
drawn from the arts, Granger’s highly readable book is essential for
democratic educators, administrators, and policymakers who reject the
zombie idea that ‘real’ academic work is inherently separate from
aesthetic consummations." —Steven Fesmire, Professor of Philosophy,
Radford University; President of the Society for the Advancement of
American Philosophy; Author of John Dewey and Moral Imagination:
Pragmatism in Ethics "One of the most vexing characters on the
American art scene was Albert Barnes: the self-styled, passionate
collector whose good intentions to educate the masses ran amuck with a
museum that, like his art theories, proved too rigid to be realistic.
Thus, his friendship with John Dewey, whose wide application of art to
life has been puzzling—until now. With Granger, we see that
Barnes’ lessons in how to look, while frozen in a formal analysis of
modern French art, nonetheless unleashed in the philosopher an
expansive way to think about the aesthetic. As demonstrated here,
Dewey’s dynamic, embodied understanding inspired the evolution of
radical art throughout the 20th century, providing insight into making
and being in the world still." —Mary Jane Jacob, Professor and
Director of the Institute for Curatorial Research and Practice, School
of the Art Institute of Chicago; Author of Dewey for Artists "David
Granger’s valuable book begins by examining the mutually-influential
friendship of John Dewey and Albert Barnes, along with significant
differences between the two men. In contrast with Barnes’
comparatively ridged formalism, Granger demonstrates compatibilities
and/or relationships between Dewey’s aesthetics and painters Thomas
Hart Benton and Jackson Pollock, as well as Black Mountain College
artists and educators including John Andrew Rice, John Cage, Robert
Rauschenberg, and Merce Cunningham among others. Well researched, the
book establishes many surprising relations among people, art, and
ideas. Granger concludes with a refreshingly original vision of the
arts and education." —Jim Garrison, Professor Emeritus, School of
Education, Virginia Tech; Past-President of the John Dewey Society;
Author of Dewey and Eros: Wisdom and Desire in the Art of Teaching
Les mer
Revisioning the Arts and Education
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781433189210
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter