ABSTRACT

This companion is the first global, comprehensive text to explicate, theorize, and propose decolonial methodologies for art historians, museum professionals, artists, and other visual culture scholars, teachers, and practitioners.

Art history as a discipline and its corollary institutions - the museum, the art market - are not only products of colonial legacies but active agents in the consolidation of empire and the construction of the West. The Routledge Companion to Decolonizing Art History joins the growing critical discourse around the decolonial through an assessment of how art history may be rethought and mobilized in the service of justice - racial, gender, social, environmental, restorative, and more. This book draws attention to the work of artists, art historians, and scholars in related fields who have been engaging with disrupting master narratives and forging new directions, often within a hostile academy or an indifferent art world. The volume unpacks the assumptions projected onto objects of art and visual culture and the discourse that contains them. It equally addresses the manifold complexities around representation as visual and discursive praxis through a range of epistemologies and metaphors originated outside or against the logic of modernity. This companion is organized into four thematic sections: Being and Doing, Learning and Listening, Sensing and Seeing, and Living and Loving.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, visual culture, museum studies, race and ethnic studies, cultural studies, disability studies, and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies.

part Section I|46 pages

Introduction

part Section II|135 pages

Being and Doing

chapter 2|12 pages

Being an Indigenous Art Historian in the Twenty-First Century

How Can Māori Adornment Reveal New Ways of Thinking about Art, Its Histories, and Futures

chapter 3|11 pages

Reinvention at the Wheel

Shaping New Histories in the Decolonization of Disability

chapter 4|12 pages

The Power of Absence

An Interview with Ken Gonzales-Day

chapter 5|9 pages

Art in Paradise Found and Lost

chapter 6|12 pages

The Maquette-Modèles of Bodys Isek Kingelez

Creole Visions of Decolonial Monuments

chapter 7|11 pages

Decolonizing La Revolución

Cuban Artistic Practice in a Liminal Space

chapter 8|11 pages

Museums Are Temples of Whiteness

chapter 9|12 pages

Stepping Out of the Shadow of Imperial Monochrony

A Place-Centric Approach to Decolonizing Japanese Art History

chapter 10|13 pages

On Failure and the Nation-State

A Decolonial Reading of Alfredo Jaar's A Logo for America

part Section III|130 pages

Learning and Listening

chapter 14|11 pages

Pathways to Art History

Pedagogy, Research, and Praxis through a Decolonial Lens

chapter 15|10 pages

Pedagogies of Place

Listening and Learning in the Margins

chapter 17|11 pages

Decolonial Cinematic Flows

Histories, Movements, Confluences

chapter 19|11 pages

(Not) Performing Pasifika Indigeneity

Destabilizing the Researcher as Decolonizing Method in Art History

chapter 20|12 pages

Afterlives/Futurelives

Imagining Mermaids and Recalling Ghost Dancing

chapter 22|16 pages

Radical Pedagogy

Environmental Performances and the Politics of Hope

part Section IV|131 pages

Sensing and Seeing

chapter 25|11 pages

Dishumanizing Art History?

chapter 28|11 pages

Racialization, Creolization, and Minor Transnationalism

Black and Indigenous Exchange in Spanish Colonial Visual Culture

chapter 30|10 pages

Unseeing Art History

Inca Material Culture

chapter 31|10 pages

Debility and the Ethics of Proximity

Spatial and Temporal Immediacy in the Work of Candice Lin

chapter 32|13 pages

Decolonizing Crocodiles, Repatriating Birds

Human-Animal Relations in the Indian Landscape

chapter 33|12 pages

“We Are So Many Bodies, My Friends”

Countervisibility as Resurgent Tactics

part Section V|136 pages

Living and Loving

chapter 34|12 pages

“She Carried with Her … A Large Bundle of Wearing Apparel Belonging to Herself”

Slave Dress as Resistance in Portraiture and Fugitive Slave Advertisements

chapter 36|12 pages

The Teaching Is in the Making

A Relational and Embodied Experience of Anishinaabe Photographs

chapter 40|12 pages

Inner Spaces

The Depth Imagination

chapter 41|13 pages

Maria Auxiliadora da Silva

Nossa Mãe Maria of Terreiro Life and Faith on Black Grounds

chapter 42|11 pages

Michael Richards

Performance as Ritual and Black-Indigenous Haptic Visuality 1

chapter 43|13 pages

Bittersweet Histories and Tarnished Gold

Slavery's Sounds, Sights, and Silences in the Legacy of Dutch Brazil

chapter 44|13 pages

A Personal Take, or Stuck in the Middle/Side and Going Nowhere

An Attempt at Imagining a Methodology for Engaging Colonial Photographic Archives, Histories, and Subjectivities

part Section VI|10 pages

Afterword