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Prophets, Paupers or Professionals?

A Social History of Everyday Visual Artists in Modern Germany, 1850–Present

by Charles McClelland (Author)
©2003 Monographs 242 Pages

Summary

How did German visual artists relate to the broader society around them between the invention of the artist as «genius» and visionary, in the Romantic era of the nineteenth century, and the struggle to overcome pauperization and social marginalization through collective professionalization during much of the twentieth? The collective – if not always agreed – aspirations and expectations of artists in this long period are best reflected in the schools and academies that came to dominate their education, in their professional associations, and their strategies of marketing and economic well-being. Like members of other German learned professions, visual artists struggled to achieve autonomy from state, church, and other powerful social and economic forces while also raising and maintaining ever-evolving professional standards. Like other professions, they were forced also to make compromises with power and money, losing many battles in the process. The subjectivity of values surrounding art, the de facto economic status of artists as small entrepreneurs unable or unwilling to submit fully to corporate, bureaucratic, or union organization, and the practical inability to limit their numbers all conspired to undermine fully successful professionalization. By bringing the tools of social history to bear, this book sheds rare illumination on the little-known history of the many «everyday» German artists, rather than on the better-known works of the few.

Details

Pages
242
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039100620
Language
English
Keywords
Deutschland Künstler Sozialgeschichte 1850-2003 Prophet Social History Artist Herding Cats Society Myth Pauper
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2003. 242 pp.

Biographical notes

Charles McClelland (Author)

The Author: Charles E. McClelland obtained his BA (Hons) at Princeton in German and European Studies in 1962, his M.A. from Yale in 1963 and his Ph.D. also from Yale 1967, both in history. He has taught modern European and German history at Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of New Mexico, where he was also Director of European Studies. His most recent publications include Professions in Modern Eastern Europe/Professionen im Modernen Osteuropa, with editor’s introduction (Berlin, 1995) and The German Experience of Professionalization: Modern Learned Professions and their Organizations from the Early Nineteenth Century to the Hitler Era (Cambridge, 1991).

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Title: Prophets, Paupers or Professionals?