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Book Cover
Book
Author Smith, Terry (Terry E.)

Title Making the modern : industry, art, and design in America / Terry Smith
Published Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1993
1993

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Description xv, 512 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Contents Machine derived contents note: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Visual Imagery of Modernity -- Pt. 1: The Modernization of Work: Detroit, 1910-1929 -- 1: Fordism: Mass Production and Total Control -- 2: Architecture and Mass Production: The Functionalism Question -- 3: Henry Ford and Charles Sheeler: Monopoly and Modernism -- 4: The Garden in the Machine -- Pt. 2: Modernization and National Dissensus: Imagery of Reality in the 1930s -- 5: The Shaping of Seeing: Outrageous Fortune -- 6: The Resistant Other: Diego Rivera in Detroit -- 7: Frida Kahlo: Marginality and Modernity -- 8: Of the People, For the People -- 9: Official Images, Modern Times -- Pt. 3: Design or Revolution? Styling Modernity in the 1930s -- 10: Designing Design: Modernity for Sale -- 11: "Pure" Modernism Inc. -- 12: Funfair Futurama: A Consuming Spectacle -- Pt. 4: The Modern Effect -- 13: Modernity becomes Normal -- Notes -- Index
Summary Employing a wide rage of disciplines - including history of technology, business, design, art, advertising, and architecture - Smith provides fresh readings of an array of topics including: the nostalgic desire for the past as an essential part of modernity; Frida Kahlo's feminist resistance to masculinist modernization; the popularity of industrial design; the Chicago and New York expositions as consumerist utopias. This broad, challenging work advances our understanding not only of twentieth-century art and design, but also of a crucial period in the history of modern culture
Illustrated with an extraordinary variety of photographs, many previously unpublished, Making the Modern focuses on the key images of modernity - industry and workers, cities and crowds, and products and consumers - as portrayed across the broad spectrum of American experience. Albert Kahn's plant designs, Charles Sheeler's industrial landscapes, Margaret Bourke White's photographs, Diego Rivera's Detroit murals, the design of Fortune magazine, advertising, the FSA historical project - all are cited here in a brilliant synthesis of visual imagery and historical interpretation
Smith reveals how this visual revolution played an instrumental role in the complex psychological, social, economic, and technological changes that came to be known as the second industrial revolution. From the role of visualization in the invention of the assembly line, to office and building design, to the corporate and lifestyle images that filled new magazines such as Life and Fortune, he traces the extent to which the second wave of industrialization engaged the visual arts to project a new iconology of progress
In this ambitious book, Terry Smith chronicles the modernist revolution in American art and design - from its origins in the new industrial culture of the twentieth century to its powerful and transforming effects on the way Americans came to see themselves and their world. From Ford Motor's first assembly line in 1913 to the New York World's Fair in 1939, Smith traces the distinctive visual imagery that evolved as the core of American modernity in the first half of the twentieth century
Analysis United States
Visual arts
United States
Visual arts
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 453-496) and index
Subject Art and industry -- United States.
Art, American -- 20th century.
Art, American.
Design -- United States.
Industrial design -- United States.
Modernism (Art) -- United States.
LC no. 92000935
ISBN 0226763463