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Domesticating the Invisible : Form and Environmental Anxiety in Postwar America

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Domesticating the Invisible examines how postwar notions of form developed in response to newly perceived environmental threats, in turn inspiring artists to model plastic composition on natural systems often invisible to the human eye.

Melissa S. Ragain focuses on the history of art education in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to understand how an environmental approach to form inspired new art programs at Harvard and MIT.

As they embraced scientistic theories of composition, these institutions also cultivated young artists as environmental agents who could influence urban design and contribute to an ecologically sensitive public sphere.

Ragain combines institutional and intellectual histories to map how the emergency of environmental crisis altered foundational modernist assumptions about form, transforming questions about aesthetic judgment into questions about an ethical relationship to the environment.

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£44.00 Save 20.00%
RRP £55.00
Product Details
0520343824 / 9780520343825
Hardback
12/01/2021
United States
264 pages, 37 color illustrations, 50 b-w illustrations
178 x 254 mm