EXPLORING VISUAL CULTURE: DEFINITIONS, CONCEPT, CONTEXTS, edited
by Matthew Rampley. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005, 257
pp., $32.00 paper.
I review this new introductory text in light of its competition as a textbook
for undergraduates and as an introduction for graduate students. Other
such texts include Barnard, Elkins, Mirzeoff, Walker and Chaplin, and
Sturken and Cartwright, which appears to be the most widely used. Rampley's
anthology stands up well among these competitors, especially for those
who wish to transition from art to contemporary popular visual culture
rather more gently than other texts that, for many students, might come
as too abrupt a disjuncture from mainstream practice in schools of art
and design. As Matthew Rampley states in his excellent introduction, if
the book has an original contribution to make, it is to situate an acknowledgment
of traditional practices and issues into the makeup of visual culture
studies. Unlike other texts, mentioned above, which tend to stress screen
and print media, Rampley's agenda is to remind readers of the historical
origins of many recent developments as well as the contribution of cultural
forms other than two-dimensional ones. Thus, chapters are included that
trace the history and continuing contribution of traditional media; art,
design, craft, and architecture each receive individual chapters. MacDonald,
for example, describes the complex meanings of craft and its relationship
to fine art and design from classical times to today, as well as summarizes
the characteristics and politics of craft today. Furthermore, the influence
of technology is charted principally through conventional art, and the
chapters on photography, film, and fashion are likewise cast largely in
terms of historical accounts of whether these forms should be considered
to be art.
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