Burning the Box of Beautiful Things: The Development of a Postmodern Sensibility

Burning the Box of Beautiful Things: The Development of a Postmodern Sensibility

by Len Deighton (Contributor), Alex Seago (Author)

Synopsis

Alex Seago's book has been inspired by his desire to understand and discover the origins of postmodern culture in Britain. One of the main points of his study is that it was art and design students who were among the first to be aware of and to articulate social implications of postmodern culture. Arguing that postwar art schools provided a vital crucible for the development of a particuarly English cultural sensibility, he focuses on cultural change at the Royal College of Art, London, during the 1950s and 1960s. The students' attack on the English 'box of beautiful things' - a term used by a former student to describe the neo-Romantic, neo-Victorian, highly decorated tastes of some RCA tutors - took several forms which eventually resulted in the Pop Art produced by the 1959-62 generation (Boshier, Phillips, Jones, Hockney et al.) Alex Seago traces the emergence of English postmodernism through the pages of ARK: The Journal of the Royal College of Art, interviewing ARK's editors, art editors, and contributors including Len Deighton, novelist and art editor of ARK 10; Clifford Hatts, student at the RCA 1946-8 and later head of the Design Group, BBC; Peter Blake (RCA Painting School, 1953-6); Robyn Denny (RCA Painting School, 1954-7). ARK's object of enquiry remained 'the elusive but necessary relationships between the arts and the social context' throughout its twenty-five year history, making it a valuable archive for the cultural historian: in its most memorable issues, ARK's layouts complemented the contents to produce distillations of the energy and enthusiasm of the period under review.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Published: 02 Nov 1995

ISBN 10: 0198174055
ISBN 13: 9780198174059

Media Reviews
Burning the Box of Beautiful Things fills a gaping void in recent British art history: it is scholarly, informative and accessible without lapsing into trendy hip revival style. --Tate Magazine The book is an important undertaking....Valuable, worthwhile and original. --EYE Burning the Box is not so much a theoretical analysis as a marvelous piece of archival research, a thoughtful collage of insights and interviews. --Modern Painters.. .absorbing...valuable, worthwhile and original...[a] pioneering book. --Eye, UK This is an exemplary work, suitably illustrated, charting complex cultural changes occurring at the Royal College of Art, London, between 1950 and 1963....Its valuable contribution to the field is to clothe a conceptual carcass in a rich tapestry of lived experience.