
In His Debut Collection, Some Trees (1956), The American Poet John Ashbery Poses A Question That Resonates Across His Oeuvre And Much Of Modern Art: 'how Could He Explain To Them His Prayer / That Nature, Not Art, Might Usurp The Canvas?' When Ashbery Asks This Strange Question, He Joins A Host Of Transatlantic Avant-gardists—from The Dadaists To The 1960s Neo-avant-gardists And Beyond—who Have Dreamed Of Turning Art Into Nature, Of Creating Art That Would Be 'valid Solely On Its Own Terms, In The Way Nature Itself Is Valid, In The Way A Landscape—not Its Picture—is Aesthetically Valid' (clement Greenberg, 1939). Invisible Terrain Reads Ashbery As A Bold Intermediary Between Avant-garde Anti-mimeticism And The Long Western Nature Poetic Tradition. In Chronicling Ashbery's Articulation Of 'a Completely New Kind Of Realism' And His Engagement With Figures Ranging From Wordsworth To Warhol, The Book Presents A Broader Case Study Of Nature's Dramatic Transformation Into A Resolutely Unnatural Aesthetic Resource In 20th-century Art And Literature. The Story Begins In The Late 1940s With The Abstract Expressionist Valorization Of Process, Surface, And Immediacy—summed Up By Jackson Pollock's Famous Quip, 'i Am Nature'—that So Influenced The Early New York School Poets. It Ends With 'breezeway,' A Poem About Hurricane Sandy. Along The Way, The Project Documents Ashbery's Strategies For Literalizing The 'stream Of Consciousness' Metaphor, His Negotiation Of Pastoral And Politics During The Vietnam War, And His Investment In 'bad' Nature Poetry.
This book investigates how John Ashbery and other avant-garde artists attempted to reconcile the traditional Western nature poetic tradition with the anti-mimetic impulses of 20th-century modernism. Stephen J. Ross, an academic scholar, utilizes a wide range of primary texts, art historical documents, and critical theory to argue that Ashbery serves as a pivotal figure who transformed nature into an unnatural aesthetic resource. The work posits that this shift reflects a broader evolution in how art attempts to achieve a validity comparable to the natural world itself.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and critics recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of Ashbery's complex relationship with the natural world. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for those familiar with modern poetic theory and art history.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192519301
ISBN-13:
9780192519306
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