Repositioning Pacific Arts Artists, Objects, Histories |
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Editor-In-Chief:
| Allen, Anne E. |
Editor:
| Waite, Deborah B. |
Contribution by:
| Austin, Mike Beran, Harry Coiffier, Christian Ellis, Ngarino Evans, Rose Gunn, Michael Hasell, Jill Kaeppler, Adrienne L. Lewis-Harris, Jackie Scothorn, Hilary Taulealo, Vanya van der Zee, Pauline Vercoe, Caroline White, Moira Zeller, Susan Kennedy Zeplin, Pamela |
ISBN: | 978-1-907774-23-2 |
Publication Date: | Nov 2014 |
Publisher: | Sean Kingston Publishing
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | USD $155.00 |
Book Description:
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In investigating both customary and modern Pacific art, these collected essays present a wide-ranging view across time and space, taking the reader from antiquities to contemporary art and travelling across the region from Australia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, New Zealand to Samoa. Studies of artefacts and traditions, such as self-portraiture, wood carvings, shields, tapa, dance and masks, use a variety of approaches, some deriving from museum studies while others are based on...
More DescriptionIn investigating both customary and modern Pacific art, these collected essays present a wide-ranging view across time and space, taking the reader from antiquities to contemporary art and travelling across the region from Australia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, New Zealand to Samoa. Studies of artefacts and traditions, such as self-portraiture, wood carvings, shields, tapa, dance and masks, use a variety of approaches, some deriving from museum studies while others are based on field investigation. Together they reveal the oppositional tensions between tradition and innovation, and the inspiration this provides for contemporary artistic practice, either through conscious implementation or rejection of past definitions. Engagement with these cultural performances and objects provide new possibilities for the creation of current identities. In this volume, artists, curators and academics, including Maori and other Islanders, bring fresh approaches to Oceanic Art History that will also be interesting to scholars of Indigenous Art more generally. The drafting of antiquities legislation, the tortuous journeys objects have taken to find a place in galleries, the use of exhibitions in cultural exchange, framed by the architecture of museums, as well as the role of film and photography in appropriating Pacific art culture for emerging nationalisms, all of these are considered here to enhance our understanding of indigenous arts place in the world today. These historical perspectives provide the framework in which to explore contemporary acquisition and outreach work with Pacific communities that seeks to reconnect people with objects taken away from the places and intentions of their makers.