Ancestral Modern Australian Aboriginal Art Pamela McClusky

Series:
Seattle Art Museum
Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
18 May 2012
ISBN:
9780300180039
Dimensions:
176 pages: 279 x 254 x 23mm
Illustrations:
150 colour illustrations

Australian Aboriginal art is the longest continuous art tradition in the world, spanning over 50,000 years. Ancestral Modern puts a modern face on the tradition, celebrating the past 40 years of contemporary indigenous art, which has experienced a renaissance since 1970.

Featuring more than 100 paintings and sculptures in a variety of media, this book provides a fascinating revision of many commonly-held beliefs about the art form. Aboriginal artwork is often said to induce a sense of "intellectual vertigo", due to its expansive interpretations and methods of representation. The bold patterns and striking colours lend comparisons to abstract expressionist or minimal art, but as this book shows, the imagery is more deeply narrative and often more literal than previously thought, depicting landscapes, still lifes, historical events both real and mythic, ceremonies, portraits, and even laws.

Works of art are shown alongside photographs of the actual landscapes and animals depicted, providing important visual context for understanding an art form that is once ancient and contemporary. Also included are detailed biographies of many leading contemporary artists, including Emily Kame Kngwarreye, John Mawurndjul, and Rover Thomas.

More about this title

This catalogue accompanies the exhibition 'Ancestral Modern' at the Seattle Art Museum (31 May - 2 September, 2012)


Pamela McClusky is curator of African and Oceanic art at the Seattle Art Museum. Her books include Art from Africa: Long Steps Never Broke a Back.

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