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Focuses on the role of images in the culture of fear in contemporary art and on the development of an 'aesthetics of fear'. This book offers a broad look at the ways in which fear pervades various aspects of our lives and defines how we relate to and interpret the world around us.
Book Details
Publisher:
REAKTION BOOKS
Publication Date:
01-Nov-2012
ISBN:
9781780230191
Guardian review
Fear and Art in the Contemporary World by Caterina Albano review
PD Smith the guardian Fri 08 February 2013
"I stood there trembling with anxiety and I felt a great, infinite scream through nature." This was how Edvard Munch described the experience while out walking that led him to paint The Scream (1893). For Caterina Albano, the themes of this painting the "fragmented self" and existential angst have become integral to our contemporary culture of fear, with its persistent anxiety about everything from pesticides in food, global warming and terrorism, to paedophiles and obesity. Albano uses modern art as a lens through which to examine how fear has become the zeitgeist of our age. In four chapters bodies, objects, narratives and spaces she shows how artworks such as John Isaacs' I can't help the way I feel (2003) illustrate anxieties about our bodies, the intrusion of the uncanny into everyday life (Rachel Whiteread's Place (Village), 2006-08), or our alienation from nature, an idea succinctly expressed by Gerhard Richter: "For us everything is empty." Well researched though this book is, it is let down by the writing, which cries out for some serious editing.