U.S. Culture
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As artists felt released from the boundaries and conventions of the past
and free to emphasize expressiveness and innovation, the abstract
expressionists gave way to other innovative styles in American art.
Beginning in the 1930s Joseph Cornell created hundreds of boxed
assemblages, usually from found objects, with each based on a single theme
to create a mood of contemplation and sometimes of reverence. Cornell's
boxes exemplify the modern fascination with individual vision, art that
breaks down boundaries between forms such as painting and sculpture, and
the use of everyday objects toward a new end. Other artists, such as
Robert Rauschenberg, combined disparate objects to create large, collage-
like sculptures known as combines in the 1950s. Jasper Johns, a painter, sculptor, and printmaker, recreated countless familiar objects, most
memorably the American flag.
The most prominent American artistic style to follow abstract
expressionism was the pop art movement that began in the 1950s. Pop art
attempted to connect traditional art and popular culture by using images
from mass culture. To shake viewers out of their preconceived notions
about art, sculptor Claes Oldenburg used everyday objects such as pillows
and beds to create witty, soft sculptures. Roy Lichtenstein took this a
step further by elevating the techniques of commercial art, notably
cartooning, into fine art worthy of galleries and museums. Lichtenstein's
large, blown-up cartoons fill the surface of his canvases with grainy
black dots and question the existence of a distinct realm of high art.
These artists tried to make their audiences see ordinary objects in a
refreshing new way, thereby breaking down the conventions that formerly
defined what was worthy of artistic representation.
Probably the best-known pop artist, and a leader in the movement, was Andy
Warhol, whose images of a Campbell’s soup can and of the actress Marilyn
Monroe explicitly eroded the boundaries between the art world and mass
culture. Warhol also cultivated his status as a celebrity. He worked in
film as a director and producer to break down the boundaries between
traditional and popular art. Unlike the abstract expressionists, whose
conceptual works were often difficult to understand, Andy Warhol's
pictures, and his own face, were instantly recognizable.
Conceptual art, as it came to be known in the 1960s, like its
predecessors, sought to break free of traditional artistic associations.
In conceptual art, as practiced by Sol LeWitt and Joseph Kosuth, concept
takes precedent over actual object, by stimulating thought rather than
following an art tradition based on conventional standards of beauty and
artisanship.
Modern artists changed the meaning of traditional visual arts and brought a new imaginative dimension to ordinary experience. Art was no longer viewed as separate and distinct, housed in museums as part of a historical inheritance, but as a continuous creative process. This emphasis on constant change, as well as on the ordinary and mundane, reflected a distinctly American democratizing perspective. Viewing art in this way removed the emphasis from technique and polished performance, and many modern artworks and experiences became more about expressing ideas than about perfecting finished products.
Photography
Photography is probably the most democratic modern art form because it can
be, and is, practiced by most Americans. Since 1888, when George Eastman
developed the Kodak camera that allowed anyone to take pictures, photography has struggled to be recognized as a fine art form. In the
early part of the 20th century, photographer, editor, and artistic
impresario Alfred Stieglitz established 291, a gallery in New York City, with fellow photographer Edward Steichen, to showcase the works of
photographers and painters. They also published a magazine called Camera
Work to increase awareness about photographic art. In the United States, photographic art had to compete with the widely available commercial
photography in news and fashion magazines. By the 1950s the tradition of
photojournalism, which presented news stories primarily with photographs, had produced many outstanding works. In 1955 Steichen, who was director of
photography at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, called attention to
this work in an exhibition called The Family of Man.
Throughout the 20th century, most professional photographers earned their
living as portraitists or photojournalists, not as artists. One of the
most important exceptions was Ansel Adams, who took majestic photographs
of the Western American landscape. Adams used his art to stimulate social
awareness and to support the conservation cause of the Sierra Club. He
helped found the photography department at the Museum of Modern Art in
1940, and six years later helped establish the photography department at
the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco (now the San Francisco
Art Institute). He also held annual photography workshops at Yosemite
National Park from 1955 to 1981 and wrote a series of influential books on
photographic technique.
Adams's elegant landscape photography was only one small stream in a
growing current of interest in photography as an art form. Early in the
20th century, teacher-turned-photographer Lewis Hine established a
documentary tradition in photography by capturing actual people, places, and events. Hine photographed urban conditions and workers, including
child laborers. Along with their artistic value, the photographs often
implicitly called for social reform. In the 1930s and 1940s, photographers
joined with other depression-era artists supported by the federal
government to create a photographic record of rural America. Walker Evans,
Dorothea Lange, and Arthur Rothstein, among others, produced memorable and
widely reproduced portraits of rural poverty and American distress during
the Great Depression and during the dust storms of the period.
In 1959, after touring the United States for two years, Swiss-born photographer Robert Frank published The Americans, one of the landmarks of documentary photography. His photographs of everyday life in America introduced viewers to a depressing, and often depressed, America that existed in the midst of prosperity and world power.
Photographers continued to search for new photographic viewpoints. This
search was perhaps most disturbingly embodied in the work of Diane Arbus.
Her photos of mental patients and her surreal depictions of Americans
altered the viewer’s relationship to the photograph. Arbus emphasized
artistic alienation and forced viewers to stare at images that often made
them uncomfortable, thus changing the meaning of the ordinary reality that
photographs are meant to capture.
American photography continues to flourish. The many variants of art photography and socially conscious documentary photography are widely available in galleries, books, and magazines.
A host of other visual arts thrive, although they are far less connected to traditional fine arts than photography. Decorative arts include, but are not limited to, art glass, furniture, jewelry, pottery, metalwork, and quilts. Often exhibited in craft galleries and studios, these decorative arts rely on ideals of beauty in shape and color as well as an appreciation of well-executed crafts. Some of these forms are also developed commercially. The decorative arts provide a wide range of opportunity for creative expression and have become a means for Americans to actively participate in art and to purchase art for their homes that is more affordable than works produced by many contemporary fine artists.
Literature
American literature since World War II is much more diverse in its voices
than ever before. It has also expanded its view of the past as people
rediscovered important sources from non-European traditions, such as
Native American folktales and slave narratives. Rediscovering these
traditions expanded the range of American literary history.
American Jewish writing from the 1940s to the 1960s was the first serious
outpouring of an American literature that contained many voices. Some
Jewish writers had begun to be heard as literary critics and novelists
before World War II, part of a general broadening of American literature
during the first half of the 20th century. After the war, talented Jewish
writers appeared in such numbers and became so influential that they stood
out as a special phenomenon. They represented at once a subgroup within
literature and the new voice of American literature.
Several Jewish American novelists, including Herman Wouk and Norman
Mailer, wrote important books about the war without any special ethnic
resonance. But writers such as novelists Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, and
Philip Roth, and storytellers Grace Paley and Cynthia Ozick wrote most
memorably from within the Jewish tradition. Using their Jewish identity
and history as background, these authors asked how moral behavior was
possible in modern America and how the individual could survive in the
contemporary world. Saul Bellow most conspicuously posed these questions, framing them even before the war was over in his earliest novel, Dangling
Man (1944). He continued to ask them in various ways through a series of
novels paralleling the life cycle, including The Adventures of Augie March
(1953), Herzog (1964), and Mr. Sammler’s Planet (1970). One novel in the
series earned a Pulitzer Prize (Humboldt's Gift, 1975). Bellow was awarded
the Nobel Prize for literature in 1976. Like Bellow, Philip Roth and
Bernard Malamud struggled with identity and selfhood as well as with
morality and fate. However, Roth often resisted being categorized as a
Jewish writer. Playwright Arthur Miller rarely invoked his Jewish
heritage, but his plays contained similar existential themes.
Isaac Bashevis Singer was also part of this postwar group of American
Jewish writers. His novels conjure up his lost roots and life in prewar
Poland and the ghostly, religiously inspired fantasies of Jewish existence
in Eastern Europe before World War II. Written in Yiddish and much less
overtly American, Singer’s writings were always about his own specific
past and that of his people. Singer's re-creation of an earlier world as
well as his stories of adjusting to the United States won him a Nobel
Prize in literature in 1978.
Since at least the time of the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s, American
writers of African descent, such as Richard Wright, sought to express the
separate experiences of their people while demanding to be recognized as
fully American. The difficulty of that pursuit was most completely and
brilliantly realized in the haunting novel Invisible Man (1952) by Ralph
Ellison. African American writers since then have contended with the same
challenge of giving voice to their experiences as a marginalized and often
despised part of America.
Several African American novelists in recent decades have struggled to
represent the wounded manner in which African Americans have participated
in American life. In the 1950s and 1960s, James Baldwin discovered how
much he was part of the United States after a period of self-imposed exile
in Paris, and he wrote about his dark and hurt world in vigorous and
accusatory prose. The subject has also been at the heart of an
extraordinary rediscovery of the African American past in the plays of
Lorraine Hansberry and the fiction of Alice Walker, Charles Johnson, and
Toni Morrison. Probably more than any American writer before her, Morrison
has grappled with the legacy that slavery inflicted upon African Americans
and with what it means to live with a separate consciousness within
American culture. In 1993 Morrison became the first African American
writer to be awarded a Nobel Prize in literature.
Writers from other groups, including Mexican Americans, Native Americans,
Chinese Americans, Korean Americans, and Filipino Americans, also grappled
with their separate experiences within American culture. Among them, N.
Scott Momaday, Leslie Marmon Silko, and Louise Erdrich have dealt with
issues of poverty, life on reservations, and mixed ancestry among Native
Americans. Rudolfo Anaya and Sandra Cisneros have dealt with the
experiences of Mexican Americans, and Amy Tan and Maxine Hong Kingston
have explored Chinese American family life.
Even before World War II, writers from the American South reflected on
what it meant to have a separate identity within American culture. The
legacy of slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction left the South with a
sense of a lost civilization, embodied in popular literature such as Gone
With the Wind (1936) by Margaret Mitchell, and with questions about how a
Southern experience could frame a literary legacy. Southern literature in
the 20th century draws deeply on distinct speech rhythms, undercurrents of
sin, and painful reflections on evil as part of a distinctly Southern
tradition. William Faulkner most fully expressed these issues in a series
of brilliant and difficult novels set in a fictional Mississippi county.
These novels, most of them published in the 1930s, include The Sound and
the Fury (1929), Light in August (1932), and Absalom, Absalom (1936). For
his contribution, Faulkner received the Nobel Prize in literature in 1949.
More recent Southern writers, such as Carson McCullers, Flannery O'Connor,
Walker Percy, James Dickey, and playwright Tennessee Williams, have
continued this tradition of Southern literature.
In addition to expressing the minority consciousness of Southern
regionalism, Faulkner's novels also reflected the artistic modernism of
20th-century literature, in which reality gave way to frequent
interruptions of fantasy and the writing is characterized by streams of
consciousness rather than by precise sequences in time. Other American
writers, such as Thomas Pynchon, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., and E. L. Doctorow
also experimented with different novel forms and tried to make their
writing styles reflect the peculiarities of consciousness in the chaos of
the modern world. Doctorow, for example, in his novel Ragtime juxtaposed
real historical events and people with those he made up. Pynchon
questioned the very existence of reality in The Crying of Lot 49 (1966)
and Gravity’s Rainbow (1973).
Aside from Faulkner, perhaps the greatest modernist novelist writing in the United States was йmigrй Vladimir Nabokov. Nabokov first wrote in his native Russian, and then in French, before settling in the United States and writing in English. Nabokov saw no limits to the possibilities of artistic imagination, and he believed the artist's ability to manipulate language could be expressed through any subject. In a series of novels written in the United States, Nabokov demonstrated that he could develop any situation, even the most alien and forbidden, to that end. This was demonstrated in Lolita (1955), a novel about sexual obsession that caused a sensation and was first banned as obscene.
Despite its obvious achievements, modernism in the United States had its most profound effect on other forms of literature, especially in poetry and in a new kind of personal journalism that gradually erased the sharp distinctions between news reporting, personal reminiscence, and fiction writing.
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