Art and Technology in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

331 pages

English language

Published 2000 by Zone Books, Distributed by MIT Press.

ISBN:
978-1-890951-02-3
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OCLC Number:
40654699

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5 stars (1 review)

Although the work of Pierre Francastel (1900-1970) has long carried the label "sociology of art," it bears little resemblance to anything conventionally sociological. For too long Francastel has been unavailable to English-language readers, and hence known only through erroneous and secondhand characterizations. This translation of Art and Technology should open the way for a rediscovery and reconsideration of this brilliant, often misunderstood thinker. Unlike adherents of the dominant schools of Anglo-American and German art history, Francastel was not obsessed with establishing a quasi-scientific methodology as the basis for his studies. But as art history itself is being reshaped by the culture of technology, his nuanced meditations from the 1950s on the intricate intersection of technology and art gain heightened value. The concrete objects that Francastel examines are for the most part from the architecture and design of the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth century. Through them he engages his central problem: …

2 editions

Unsatisfactory but Rewarding

5 stars

Francastel in this book tries to construct a relay, a deep common ground, between the aesthetic and the technological. His methodology is roughly a sociological or even anthropological one. By means of anthropological analysis he tries to single out the concordance that supervenes the two - the aesthetic and the technological. However, his focus, his aim, is towards a much deeper level of confluence: a complete re-evaluation of the schema of categorization that generates the segragation between the aesthetic and the technological, between fine art and architecture and technology. Hence what he's actually trying to do is a:

[...] (metaphysical-theological restructuring) or in a complete reformulation of the categories which originated in, roughly speaking, the 12th centuries, e.g. in the work of St.Bonaventure (De Redcutione Artium ad Theologiam), that may possibly in a structural manner resolve the tension that maintains the cleavage [...]

(See (Preface to) an Intellectual Grasp of …

Subjects

  • Art History
  • Philosophy of Art
  • History of Technology
  • Philosophy of Technology
  • Sociology