Norman Catherine and the art of terror

dc.contributor.authorJamal, A. (Ashraf)
dc.date.accessioned2010-11-11T13:24:01Z
dc.date.available2010-11-11T13:24:01Z
dc.date.created2010-11
dc.date.issued2001
dc.descriptionArticle digitised using: Suprascan 1000 RGB scanner, scanned at 400 dpi; 24-bit colour; 100% Image derivating - Software used: Adobe Photoshop CS3 - Image levels, crop, deskew Abbyy Fine Reader No.9 - Image manipulation + OCR Adobe Acrobat 9 (PDF)en_US
dc.description.abstractThis essay was originally commissioned by Linda Givon of the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg. The first movement - "Escape and Resolution" - served as the preface for the first major retrospective on the artist, published by the Goodman Gallery in 2000 and was simply titled "Norman Catherine". The foreword was by David Bowie who in addition to being a pop icon is also an art collector and critic. The main text is by Hazel Friedman. My essay, including the opening movement, is published here for the first time in full. Its purpose is to trace Catherine's journey over a period spanning thirty years to locate the key dimension of laughter and assess the nature of its artistic expression and formal resolution. The second movement - "States of Emergency" - situates the work within a South African context. The third movement re-evaluates the tendency of locating the artist - and South African art in general - within a framing colonial/apartheid legacy. Through the critical prism of Camille Paglia's Sexual Personae, the third movement - "Energy and Form" - asks that we assess Catherine's work within the primal conflict between Apollo and Dionysus. The final movement - "City Deep" - returns Catherine to the secular domain and examines his output in relation to a post-apartheid, inner city, and trans-national domain. At once "primitive and futuristic", Catherine's art, through the distinctiveness of its style, foregrounds laughter and terror as the Janus-faced signature of our time.en_US
dc.description.urihttp://explore.up.ac.za/record=b1719138en_US
dc.format.extent20 pagesen_US
dc.format.mediumPdfen_US
dc.identifier.citationJamal, A 2001, 'Norman Catherine and the art of terror.' South African Journal of Art History, vol. 16, pp. 1-19.en_US
dc.identifier.issn0258-3542
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/15250
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherArt Historical Work Group of South Africaen_US
dc.rightsArt Historical Work Group of South Africaen_US
dc.subjectSouth African arten_US
dc.subjectCatherine, Norman, 1949-en_US
dc.subjectGoodman Galleryen_US
dc.subjectSouth African artistsen_US
dc.subject20th century South African arten_US
dc.subject.lcshArt, South African -- 20th centuryen
dc.subject.lcshCatherine, Norman, 1949- -- Criticism and interpretationen
dc.subject.lcshArt and society -- South Africaen
dc.subject.lcshApartheid in arten
dc.subject.lcshHorror in arten
dc.subject.lcshTerror in arten
dc.titleNorman Catherine and the art of terroren_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

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