Rome Reconfigured
Author | : Kaspar Thormod |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 262 |
Release | : 2018 |
ISBN-10 | : OCLC:1085026319 |
ISBN-13 | : |
Rating | : 4/5 (19 Downloads) |
Download or read book Rome Reconfigured written by Kaspar Thormod and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page 262 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This study examines how visions of Rome manifest themselves in artworks produced by international artists during or after their stay at the city’s foreign academies. I treat the extensive body of aesthetic material as a "laboratory" for exploring the wealth of responsive, sometimes agitated, sometimes conflicting ideas which are not passively transmitted by Rome, but framed, activated and given form by the artists. The account is wide-ranging in so far as it combines a large number of artworks; and it is selective in the sense that it frames these artworks within specific thematically oriented chapters. The result is a dynamic visual history of how artists reconfigure Rome today - from critical evaluations of the institutional frameworks and legacies of the foreign academies to explorations of how artists negotiate the spectacle of Roman sites; from portraits of the people who inhabit both the centre and the periphery of the city to studies of how the notions of history and Roman artistic traditions are appropriated and reconfigured in the present. Historiographical issues are still central to the artistic reconfiguration, but the main emphasis has shifted towards how Rome as a place, an idea and a historical legacy responds to our present world. These artists create work that situates Rome in the entanglement of past and present as well as in local and global contexts. It is through the tensions and possibilities that this entanglement brings to the fore that the artworks challenge more traditional historical reflections on the city. When artists successfully reconfigure Rome, they provide us with visions that, being anchored in a present, undermine the connotations of permanence and immovability that cling to the 'Eternal City' epithet. Looking at this work, we are invited critically to engage with the question: what is Rome today? - or perhaps better: what can Rome be?