1.) According to Andy Grundberg’s Crisis of the real, postmodernism is “in
its art and theory, is a reflection of the conditions of our time.” (Grundberg, 165) He goes on to explain that
how postmodernism was defined in different mediums in art. All mediums have a
different interpretation and style postmodernism. For example in architecture, “postmodernism
is involved with redecorating the stripped-down elements of architectural
modernism, thereby restoring some of the emotional complexity and spiritual
capacity that the best buildings seem to have.” (Grundberg,165) This definition
of postmodernist architecture would not be exactly the same as the definition
of other postmodernist art. Grunberg states, “The same condition exists in
music, and in literature-each defines its postmodernism in relation to its own
peculiar modernism.” (Grundberg, 166) I believe that postmodernism is a critique
of modernist art, explanation of the new age, and represents art of its own
style.
2.) One main
characteristic of postmodernist photography is the “self-conscious awareness of
being a camera based and camera bound culture.” (Grundberg, 170) Also,
postmodernist photography came from “assembling one’s art from a variety of sources.”
(Grundberg, 169) Although postmodernist photography is very different from
modernist photography, postmodernist is a response to the works in the
modernist era. Instead of photography being thought of as an inferior form of
art, it is thought of as significant. Culturally, it is more accepted, because
society is more “camera bound”. This can
be related to the thought that postmodernism “is a reflection of the conditions
of our time.” (Grundberg 165) Also, instead of creating “original” work to
produce an idea, postmodernist photography was known to recycle ideas to make a
new piece. In this sense, Postmodernism relates to modernism, because it was
formed out of the modernist era. “Modernism required that photography
cultivated the photographic.” (Grundberg, 175)
Postmodernism, however, has an “awareness of the act of photographing ad
the two dimensional, cropped-from-a-larger-context condition of the photograph
as a picture.” (Grundberg, 175) In these
aspects, postmodernism challenges modernism.
Nice work dissecting this difficult reading
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