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Frames within Frames

The Art Museum as Cultural Artifact

by Suzanne Oberhardt (Author)
©2001 Textbook 165 Pages
Series: Counterpoints, Volume 167

Summary

The art museum has changed shape. Its bricks have been flattened on paper, celluloid, and plastic and diffused into virtual spaces. The relationship between flesh and environment has been irrevocably changed as people no longer have to attend the architectural structure of the art museum to know the art museum. It recurs infinitely in our daily lives – on television, movie, and computer screens; in books and magazines; and on urban artifacts from matchbook covers to billboards. These representations may not be real art museums per se, but they provide the basis upon which most people now partake of the museum’s sacred rituals. Suzanne Oberhardt offers a new way of seeing the art museum as it is transformed and reinvented in the twenty-first century.

Details

Pages
165
Year
2001
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820451664
Language
English
Keywords
computer environment television magazines movie
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2001. 165 pp., 15 fig., 9 tables

Biographical notes

Suzanne Oberhardt (Author)

The Author: Suzanne Oberhardt received her Ph.D. from the School of Visual Arts at the Pennsylvania State University. She has worked in the visual arts and art museum sectors as lecturer, consultant, administrator, curator, and policy adviser. She is interested in the popular culture dimensions of galleries and museums, new media applications in the arts, material culture studies, and cultural criticism.

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Title: Frames within Frames