The Invisible Masterpiece
Belting explores and explains how twentieth-century artists, following Duchamp, struggled with their personal dreams of absolute art. It was not until the 1960s that artists, such as Warhol, finally began to reject the idea of the individual, totemic work of art and its permanent exhibition, as well as the related concept of the "masterpiece" and the outmoded art market that fed off it.
INTRODUCTION
1 The Farewell to Apollo
2 Raphael's Dream
3 Shipwrecked
4 Paris: A City and a Museum
5 The Artists' Curse
6 A Hieroglyph of Art
7 In the Labyrinth of Modernity
8 Escape Routes to Freedom
9 The Inferno of Perfection
10 Cathedral of Memory
11 An Invisible Masterpiece
12 The Fate of Art Fetish
13 The Dream of Absolute Art
14 The Fiction of Absolute Art
15 The Absolute Artist
16 American Modernism
17 The Call to Freedom
18 The Work as Memory
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES
CHAPTER REFERENCES
PHOTOGRAPHIC REFERENCES
INDEX
Art: Art--General Studies
History: General History
Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory
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