Authors: Paul J. Karlstrom
Fig
. and
Figs
. refer to the gathered illustration section.
About Drawing
(exhibition),
190
Abstract Expressionism: in BAM collection,
139
; expressive figuration juxtaposed to,
74
â
77
; figurative work in,
34
,
63
â
64
,
70
; gestural painting as analogue to,
240
â
41
n
14
; Guston's work as,
103
â
4
; narrative of,
59
â
62
; Pop Art compared with,
105
â
6
,
230
n
21
; public interest in,
46
; in San Francisco,
156
,
240
â
41
n
14
; Seitz's scholarship on,
52
; suspicions about, in 1960s,
229
n
12
; triumph at Venice Biennale (1964),
60
,
221
â
22
n
26
.
See also
German Expressionism; New York School of painting
abstraction: geometric,
42
; German Expressionism and move toward,
29
; Rothko and importance of,
85
; struggle to find verbal language for,
86
â
87
,
225
â
26
n
35
.
See also
Abstract Expressionism; German Expressionism; New York School of painting
ACA (gallery),
181
Acton, Arlo,
128
Adler, Felix,
18
aesthetics: authorship, originality, and the machine-made in,
101
â
2
; beauty in,
82
,
192
; form and content working together in,
100
; Hard Edge painting and,
43
â
44
; individual and subjective vs. communal and objective in,
34
; New York self-consciousness and,
41
; spiritual search for soul linked to,
130
â
31
,
163
,
173
â
77
; subjectivity emphasized in,
71
,
104
â
5
; surface vs. depth in,
101
â
2
.
See also
art and politics connections; figurative work; humanist position; “living the art life”; modernist art
Alberto Giacometti
(exhibition),
72
,
92
,
95
â
96
Alloway, Lawrence,
44
Alpers, Svetlana,
139
Alphonse Berber Gallery,
181
,
203
Alte Pinakothek (Munich),
4
â
5
,
205
Altman, Ralph,
41
Altoon, John,
42
American Impressionists,
103
American Place (N.Y.C.),
19
â
20
American Veterans Committee (AVC),
38
Amyx, Dick,
144
Andersen, Wayne: career of,
161
,
170
; on Rothko estate trial,
168
â
69
,
243
n
59
; on Selz,
170
â
73
,
244
nn
66
â
68
; works:
Cézanne and the Eternal Feminine
,
170
,
244
n
64
;
German Artists and Hitler's Mind
,
170
;
Marcel Duchamp
,
172
â
73
,
244
n
71
Anderson, Jeremy,
128
André, Carl,
202
Angelico, Fra,
120
Anglim, Paule,
131
Anna Halprin dancers,
Fig. 19
,
124
â
25
Anonymous Was a Woman (organization),
162
,
242
n
39
Antin, Eleanor,
158
anti-Semitism: in Cheronis family,
113
; experiences downplayed,
65
â
68
,
106
; in New York vs. Germany,
21
.
See also
Nazism (National Socialist Party)
Appel, Karl,
78
ARC (Society for Art, Religion, and Culture),
173
â
74
Ariel.
See
Parkinson, Ariel
art and politics connections: Andersen's comments on,
171
,
244
n
66
,
244
n
68
; anti-war stance in,
24
,
217
n
36
; Ashton and Selz's friendship in,
164
â
65
; Berkeley as center of,
133
â
34
; Chicano connections in,
187
â
89
,
247
n
27
; feminism and,
157
,
241
nn
20
â
21
; Free Speech Movement and,
119
â
20
,
123
,
233
n
3
,
247
n
32
; immigration and changes in,
15
â
16
; independent outsiders in,
161
; influences on
exhibitions and,
59
â
60
; as key focus,
xi
â
xii
; Pomona students' awareness of,
38
; retirement activities focused on,
190
â
91
,
196
â
200
; Simon and Selz, compared,
145
â
46
; youthful direction in,
7
â
8
. See also
Art of Engagement
(Selz); “living the art life”;
Werkleute
(Working People)
art brut
.
See
Dubuffet, Jean
art critics: controversy and reviews of
New Images of Man
exhibition,
63
,
75
â
78
,
172
,
222
n
32
,
223
n
5
,
223
â
24
n
6
,
224
n
12
,
248
n
29
; post-WWII art as purview of,
151
â
52
; Selz's view of role of,
100
â
101
.
See also
artist-critic-curator-dealer nexus
art dealers and galleries: Germans as, in New York City,
20
,
22
,
28
; later activities in association with,
181
â
82
,
190
â
91
,
195
â
96
,
201
,
203
; Rothko estate trial and,
165
â
69
; Selz's view of,
166
,
168
,
243
nn
60
â
61
; Venice Biennale (1964) and,
60
.
See also
artist-critic-curator-dealer nexus; art market
Artforum
(journal),
129
art history: as academic discipline,
69
,
151
; artist-focused and object-oriented approach (biographical) to,
149
â
50
,
152
â
53
; connoisseurship vs. contextual approaches in,
29
; cultural and intellectual approach (antibiographical) to,
94
,
151
,
152
,
153
,
157
; empathy with artists in,
37
â
38
; oral history method in,
158
; post-WWII art excluded from,
151
â
52
; professional organization for,
40
â
41
; Selz as outsider in,
152
,
171
â
72
; Selz's view of role of,
100
â
101
; Selz's voice in,
200
â
205
; standard textbook of,
159
â
60
; ultrareactionary attitudes toward,
39
â
40
.
See also
students; teaching; UC-Berkeley art history department
Art in America
(journal): on Denes,
161
; Dickinson's
Crucifixion
series reviewed in,
160
; on Funk,
29
,
132
â
33
; gender discrimination in,
242
n
27
; on Petlin,
182
â
83
; on Witkin,
198
Art in a Turbulent Era
(exhibition). See
German and Austrian Expressionism: Art in a Turbulent Era
Art in Our Times
(Selz),
144
,
157
,
236
n
32
,
241
n
20
,
245
n
1
Art Institute (and School) of Chicago,
34
,
173
artist-critic-curator-dealer nexus: artist vs. art historian in,
151
â
52
; art works in relation to,
87
,
226
n
37
; authorship, originality, and the machine-made in,
101
â
2
; emerging relationships in 1960s,
98
â
101
,
228
n
4
; Funk artist on,
132
â
33
; MoMA as viewed in,
105
â
6
; Pop Art in context of,
228
â
29
n
5
; Selz's view of,
102
â
3
.
See also
art critics; art history; art market; museums
artistic license idea,
38
.
See also
“living the art life”
art market: MoMA influenced by,
59
â
62
; for Pop Art,
98
â
99
,
101
â
3
,
228
n
4
; Rothko estate trial in context of,
166
â
67
; U.S. vs. Japan and other countries,
192
.
See also
art dealers and galleries; artist-critic-curator-dealer nexus; museums
Art News
(journal): anti-Semitism in,
66
; on Jewish “glass ceiling,”
106
;
New Images of Man
reviewed in,
63
,
75
,
222
n
32
;
New Realists
reviewed in,
101
,
229
n
12
; reading of,
35
Art Nouveau
(exhibition),
73
,
82
â
85
,
228
n
3
Art of Assemblage, The
(exhibition),
73
,
88
â
89
,
236
n
32
Art of Engagement
(Selz): award for,
xi
â
xii
,
200
; on Garcia,
190
; on gender discrimination,
242
n
27
; impetus for,
197
; Landauer and,
241
n
15
; political stance of,
15
,
191
; praise for,
158
,
200
; review of,
171
; Selz's openness evidenced in,
213
n
2
; youthful direction reflected in,
7
â
8
arts: cerebral, structural turn in,
98
; conceptual turn in academic,
151
,
152
; faith in transformative power of,
163
; gender inequality in,
158
â
60
,
234
n
11
,
242
n
27
; human beings as central to,
95
â
96
; influence and appropriation in,
84
â
85
; public exposure to diverse,
137
â
38
; relationship of past to present,
93
â
94
; spirituality in,
130
â
31
,
163
,
173
â
77
; subjectivity and metaphor in,
104
â
5
; unity of,
83
â
84
; what makes “good” art,
208
â
9
.
See also
aesthetics;
and specific movements or types
art scene.
See
Bay Area art scene; New York art scene; Southern California art scene
Ashton, Dore: on Abstract Expressionism,
240
â
41
n
14
; on anti-Semitism at MoMA,
67
; exhibition collaboration with Selz,
183
;
Jean Tinguely
exhibition and,
78
,
79
,
81
; as maverick,
161
; on
New Images of Man
,
224
n
6
; at Pop Art symposium,
101
; on Rothko estate trial,
165
,
167
,
168
,
169
,
243
n
59
; on
Sam Francis
(Selz),
191
; Selz's relationship with,
xi
,
109
,
163
â
65
,
190
,
195
; Symbolists exhibition and,
57
Asian art,
143
assemblage: as art movement,
133
â
34
,
237
n
49
; exhibition of,
73
,
88
â
89
,
236
n
32
; use of term,
88
â
89
,
226
n
42
.
See also
Funk art;
Jean Tinguely
(exhibition)