Clement Greenberg, Late Writings
Book Details
Description
Edited with an introduction by critic Robert C. Morgan, Clement Greenberg, Late Writings is the first collection from the period 1970 to 1990, and the only comprehensive resource for Greenberg's thought during the last third of his life. While earlier works have covered Greenberg's early and middle career, this volume spans his mature period, during which he reevaluates and refines many of his earlier tenets in some of his most carefully crafted and engaging work. Exploring a surprising breadth of issues and mediums and demonstrating a depth of aesthetic and philosophical insights, in these relatively unknown works Greenberg incites a new direction for modernism beyond the twentieth century.
This essential volume includes five interviews from the end of his life in which Greenberg revisits some of the concerns of his formative years, illuminating the progression of his thought. Late Writings is an integral resource as issues of quality and significance in the dynamic world of art continue to be redefined.
Clement Greenberg was the most influential art critic of the postwar period. He was the author of numerous books, including studies of Joan Miró and Hans Hofmann, and his essays appeared in art magazines as well as such publications as the Partisan Review, Commentary, and The Nation. Robert C. Morgan is the author of recent volumes on Bruce Nauman (2002) and Gary Hill (2000). He has written hundreds of articles and catalogues on contemporary art and curated several major retrospectives. He teaches at the Pratt Institute in New York City.
