ART SUBJECTS: MAKING ARTISTS
IN THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, by Howard Singerman. Berkeley, Los Angeles,
London: University of California Press, 1999, 296 pp., $19.95 paper.
Howard Singerman's Art Subjects is a study of the training of
visual artists in American universities from 1912 to the present. More
precisely, the book is an account of how two philosophies of education
have competed to inform that training. At the outset, Singerman announces
that the book explores a long-standing "struggle between vision and
language" (p. 10) that culminates with a decisive privileging of
language. The book mimics its putative subject in at least one interesting
way. As it was for art and the training of American artists in the twentieth
century (at least on Singerman's account of them), so it is with the book.
Each moves from a practice grounded in objective reality to a jargon-ridden
discourse that limits entry to anyone outside of its acutely self-regarding
disciplinary field. Although the book's acknowledgments segment thanks
one individual for demanding that Singerman "come to a real conclusion"
for the book, readers should note Singerman's subsequent admission that
it may not have one. At times it even appears that Singerman goes out
of his way to avoid drawing one.
Theodore Gracyk
Philosophy Department
Minnesota State University, Moorhead
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