ABSTRACT

The project of global art history calls for balanced treatment of artifacts and a unified approach. This volume emphasizes questions of transcultural encounters and exchanges as circulations. It presents a strategy that highlights the processes and connections among cultures, and also responds to the dynamics at work in the current globalized art world. The editors’ introduction provides an account of the historical background to this approach to global art history, stresses the inseparable bond of theory and practice, and suggests a revaluation of materialist historicism as an underlying premise. Individual contributions to the book provide an overview of current reflection and research on issues of circulation in relation to global art history and the globalization of art past and present. They offer a variety of methods and approaches to the treatment of different periods, regions, and objects, surveying both questions of historiography and methodology and presenting individual case studies. An 'Afterword' by James Elkins gives a critique of the present project. The book thus deliberately leaves discussion open, inviting future responses to the large questions it poses.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

Reintroducing Circulations: Historiography and the Project of Global Art History

chapter 2|12 pages

Art History and Iberian Worldwide Diffusion

Westernization / Globalization / Americanization

chapter 4|18 pages

Circulations

Early Modern Architecture in the Polish-Lithuanian Borderland

chapter 5|16 pages

Cultural Transfers in Art History

chapter 6|20 pages

Spatial Translation and Temporal Discordance

Modes of Cultural Circulation and Internationalization in Europe (Second Half of the Nineteenth and First Half of the Twentieth Century)

chapter 7|16 pages

Mapping Cultural Exchange

Latin American Artists in Paris Between the Wars

chapter 8|18 pages

The Global Network

An Approach to Comparative Art History

chapter |28 pages

Afterword