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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Julie ReissPublisher: Vernon Press Imprint: Vernon Press ISBN: 9781622734368ISBN 10: 162273436 Pages: 172 Publication Date: 19 September 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsI am honored to offer a review of 'Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene', edited by Julie Reiss. This outstanding collection of essays focuses on the role of art (primarily visual) in response to environmental awareness and audience engagement in the context of the Anthropocene. The volume's essays range from scholarly theory and reflection on the role of arts during a time of dramatic anthropogenic climate change and ecological/species decline to thoughts and reflections on specific exhibits, installations, projects and collaborations, community and pedagogical examples, and activist art projects. Reiss' Introduction notes the increasing need for art and the humanities to creatively connect with audiences in rethinking/reimaging their place in the other-than-human world in order to forge new stories of change and possibly even hope. While differing in style and purpose, each essay is excellently written and cogent to a wide array of readers. Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene is an essential book in the catalogue of environmental humanities scholarship by contextualizing the possibilities for environmentally engaged visual arts. Prof. David Taylor Stony Brook University Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene will be an invaluable resource for artists and art teachers who are trying to figure out how art can make a difference in a time of climate change. Its authors present a wide range of perspectives. They take on, among other questions: how can art directly act on environmental problems? What practical effects can art have on specific audiences? What standards can be created to evaluate the relative effectiveness of various approaches? This book is an important addition to the growing literature on our increasingly fraught situation and injects a note of hope and agency into a vital debate. Eleanor Heartney, Contributing Editor, Art in America "I am honored to offer a review of 'Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene', edited by Julie Reiss. This outstanding collection of essays focuses on the role of art (primarily visual) in response to environmental awareness and audience engagement in the context of the Anthropocene. The volume's essays range from scholarly theory and reflection on the role of arts during a time of dramatic anthropogenic climate change and ecological/species decline to thoughts and reflections on specific exhibits, installations, projects and collaborations, community and pedagogical examples, and activist art projects. Reiss' Introduction notes the increasing need for art and the humanities to creatively connect with audiences in rethinking/reimaging their place in the other-than-human world in order to forge new stories of change and possibly even hope. While differing in style and purpose, each essay is excellently written and cogent to a wide array of readers. Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene is an essential book in the catalogue of environmental humanities scholarship by contextualizing the possibilities for environmentally engaged visual arts. Prof. David Taylor Stony Brook University Art, Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene"" will be an invaluable resource for artists and art teachers who are trying to figure out how art can make a difference in a time of climate change. Its authors present a wide range of perspectives. They take on, among other questions: how can art directly act on environmental problems? What practical effects can art have on specific audiences? What standards can be created to evaluate the relative effectiveness of various approaches? This book is an important addition to the growing literature on our increasingly fraught situation and injects a note of hope and agency into a vital debate. Eleanor Heartney, Contributing Editor, Art in America" Author InformationJulie Reiss directs Modern and Contemporary Art and the Market, an accredited MA program at Christie's Education, New York. She received her PhD in Art History from the Graduate Center of CUNY. A pioneering scholar in the field of installation art, she is the author of From Margin to Center: The Spaces of Installation Art (MIT Press, 1999), as well as numerous essays and reviews. She has spoken on panels relating to art and the environment including ""Shifting Domains: Artists Respond to the Threatened Ecological Commons,"" (Rauschenberg Project Space, Marfa Dialogues, 2013), ""Landscape and the Anthropocene,"" (College Art Association, 2016), and chaired several related panels including ""Mapping, Extracting and Remaking: Contemporary Art and the Environment"" (Christie's Education, 2015), and ""Art and Sustainability in the Anthropocene"" (Council for European Studies, Univ. of Glasgow, 2017). 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