Open-access O pluralismo pós-utópico da arte

During the mid-80s, authors like Arthur Danto have championed ideas proclaiming the end of art. That historical period concured with the boom of post-modernist artistic styles and with the philosophical and cultural debates dealing with post-modernity. By "the end of art" those authors intended to mean that some sort of closure in the historical evolution of art had taken place in the 60s. A time of impressive creativity, having lasted for six centuries in the West, had reached its demise, and any form of art to emerge after that turning point would bear the signs of its post-historical condition, overlapping with the disbelief in the utopias that had somehow survived and - sometimes in the underground, sometimes explicitly - permeated all avantgardist movements, already vanishing back then. This paper sustains that, in a context like that, the much criticized post-modernist "anything goes" was in fact indicating the emergence of a new post-utopian phase for the arts and for culture in general. In face of the lack of more appropriated terms, this new phase has been called contemporaneity or contemporary art, its main characteristics to be found amid the pluralist and radically diversified maelstrom of aesthetical tendencies that so thoroughly has changed the role of curators, the nature of museums and the contingent position of art criticism.

modern art; post-modernity; curation; museums; media


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