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Peter Selz
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This absorbing biography, often conveyed through Peter Selz’s own words, traces the journey of a Jewish-German immigrant from Hitler’s Munich to the United States and on to an important career as a...
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02 January 2012

This absorbing biography, often conveyed through Peter Selz’s own words, traces the journey of a Jewish-German immigrant from Hitler’s Munich to the United States and on to an important career as a pioneer historian of modern art. Paul J. Karlstrom illuminates key historical and cultural events of the twentieth-century as he describes Selz’s extraordinary career—from Chicago’s Institute of Design (New Bauhaus), to New York’s Museum of Modern Art during the transformative 1960s, and as founding director of the University Art Museum at UC Berkeley. Karlstrom sheds light on the controversial viewpoints that at times isolated Selz from his colleagues but nonetheless affirmed his conviction that significant art was always an expression of deep human experience. The book also links Selz’s long life story—featuring close relationships with such major art figures as Mark Rothko, Dore Ashton, Willem de Kooning, Sam Francis, and Christo—with his personal commitment to political engagement.
Price: $24.95
Pages: 321
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date:
02 January 2012
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520269354
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
"[Karlstrom] does a fine job of exploring the shifting nature of art history as a discipline that develops over the course of Selz’s career and the relationships between important characters of the ‘50s and ‘60s in New York and San Francisco. He is kind but not fawning in his treatment of Selz and rightly uses his life as a vehicle for recreating some of the more dynamic moments in 20th century cultural history. In addition, he includes any number of interesting tidbits about museum and university politics on both coasts that illuminate Selz’s wide-ranging career and clarify the history of the period."
Paul J. Karlstrom, former West Coast Regional Director of the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art, is the editor of On the Edge of America: California Modernist Art, 1900–1950 (UC Press) and a co-editor of Asian American Art: A History, 1860–1970. He is coauthor of Turning the Tide: Early Los Angeles Modernists, 1920–1956 and author of Raimonds Staprans: Art of Tranquility and Turbulence.
Preface: Setting the Scene
1. Childhood: Munich, Art, and Hitler
2. New York: Stieglitz, Rheingold, and 57th Street
3. Chicago to Pomona: New Bauhaus and Early Career
4. Back to New York: Inside MoMA
5. MoMA Exhibitions: From New Images of Man to Alberto Giacometti
6. POP Goes the Art World: Departure from New York
7. Berkeley: Politics, Funk, Sex, and Finances
8. Students, Colleagues, and Controversy
9. A Career in Retirement: Returning to Early Themes and Passions
10. A Conclusion: Looking at Kentridge and Warhol
Notes
Selected Bibliography and Exhibition History
Acknowledgments
Index
1. Childhood: Munich, Art, and Hitler
2. New York: Stieglitz, Rheingold, and 57th Street
3. Chicago to Pomona: New Bauhaus and Early Career
4. Back to New York: Inside MoMA
5. MoMA Exhibitions: From New Images of Man to Alberto Giacometti
6. POP Goes the Art World: Departure from New York
7. Berkeley: Politics, Funk, Sex, and Finances
8. Students, Colleagues, and Controversy
9. A Career in Retirement: Returning to Early Themes and Passions
10. A Conclusion: Looking at Kentridge and Warhol
Notes
Selected Bibliography and Exhibition History
Acknowledgments
Index