Tuesday, 24 April 2012
Junk Art: Definition & Meaning (easyer to read)
Throughout the
20th-century, as part of the modernist revolt against the use of traditional
materials in fine art and
the consequent desire to demonstrate that "art" can be made out of anything,
artists have been creating sculpture, assemblage,
combined paintings/sculptures and installations
from an ever-widening range of unusual objects and materials. Exemplified by the
1950s work of the experimental Texan-born artist Richard
Rauschenberg, the name "junk art" was first coined by the British art critic
and curator Lawrence Alloway (1926-90), in 1961, to describe artworks
made from scrap metal, broken-up machinery, cloth rags, timber, waste paper and
other "found" materials. Traceable to early 20th-century art by Picasso, Duchamp
and Schwitters, junk art has analogies in Dada, the
works of Alberto Burri (1915-95) and later Arte
Povera artists from Italy, Spanish artists like Antoni
Tapies (b.1923), and the Californian Funk art movement. It is also
seen as a sub-species of "found art", and is sometimes referred to as
"trash art". Its identifying mark, however, remains the use of banal,
ordinary, everyday materials
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