How does pop art translate across cultures? What does pop art look like through a postcolonial lens? In the global marketplace of images, artists have long challenged the discourse of officialdom by turning to dissident elements in the languages of vernacular culture. This volume casts new light on the aesthetics and politics of pop by taking a cross-cultural perspective on what happens when everyday objects are taken out of one context and repositioned in the language of art.

Pop Art and Vernacular Cultures examines practices that range from the recycling of consumerist waste in Chicano 'rasquachismo' to the painterly pastiche of Hindu 'photo-gods', exploring the semiotic transformations that arise when art reveals unexpected antagonisms in the social life of images. Showing how boundaries marking 'high' and 'low' are further corroded by strategies that question categories of 'folk', 'nation', and 'people' in the global culture of modernity, this book breaks new ground in understanding pop art's ambiguous reaction to (and compliance with) the dynamics of high capitalism. When Mao goes pop, should we see the results as avant-garde, anti-modern, or postmodern? Who 'owns' popular culture in South Africa or Brazil? The critical revision proposed by this third volume in the Annotating Art's Histories series dramatically expands the world map of the period from which our definitions of contemporary art are drawn.

Alternative title

Annotating Art's Histories

Access level

Onsite

editor
Location code
REF.MEK
Language

English

Publication/Creation date

2007

No of pages

232

ISBN / ISSN

9780262633505

No of copies

1

Content type

anthology

Chapter headings

The Uncommon Universe of Bhupen Khakhar - Geeta KAPUR

75% Red, 20% Black and 5% White: Pop Aesthetics in Post-Revolutionary China - Martina KOEPPEL-YANG, 楊天娜

Pop Art and Vernacular Cultures
Share
Citation
Rights statement

In Copyright

What does this mean?

This item is covered by one or more copyrights. It is available for research only or use within Hong Kong’s fair dealing rules. Please do not copy, re-use or reproduce this item without the permission of the copyright holder.

Pop Art and Vernacular Cultures