1st Edition

Claes Oldenburg's Theater of Vision Poetry, Sculpture, Film, and Performance Art

By Nadja Rottner Copyright 2024
    256 Pages 20 Color & 55 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    256 Pages 20 Color & 55 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In four chronologically organized chapters, this study traces the conceptual dependence and deep connectivity among Claes Oldenburg’s poetry, sculpture, films, and performance art between 1956 and 1965.

    This research-intensive book argues that Oldenburg’s art relies on machine vision and other metaphors to visualize the structure and image content of human thought as an artistic problem. Anchored in new oral history interviews and extensive archival material, it brings together understudied visual and concrete poetry, experimental films, fifteen group performances (commonly referred to as happenings), and a close analysis of his well-known installations of The Street (1960) and The Store (1961–62), effectively setting in place a reexamination of Oldenburg’s pop art from the street, store, home, and cinema years.

    The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, film studies, performance studies, literature, intermedia studies, and media theory.

    Introduction: Intermedial and Metaphorical Being  1. Rips out of Reality, or the Camera Eye in The Street  2. Annihilate–Illuminate: Photography, Polysemy, and Performance  3. The Mind as Storehouse  4. A Cinema without Film  Epilogue: Art as Gesture

    Biography

    Nadja Rottner is Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Michigan-Dearborn.