
The Invisible Masterpiece by Hans Belting
The invisible masterpiece is an unattainable ideal, a work of art into which a dream of absolute art is incorporated but can never be realized. Using this metaphor borrowed from Balzac, Hans Belting explores the history of the masterpiece and how its status and meaning have been elevated and denigrated since the early nineteenth century. Belting explores and explains how twentieth-century artists, following Duchamp, struggled with their personal dreams of absolute art. It was not until the 1960s that artists, such as Warhol, finally began to reject the idea of the individual, totemic work of art and its permanent exhibition, as well as the related concept of the masterpiece and the outmoded art market that fed off it.
New and unused
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Product Information
| Category | Books > Nonfiction Books > Art Books |
|---|---|
| Condition | New |
