Publication | Closed Access
The De-Definition of Art
78
Citations
0
References
1973
Year
Social CriticismVisual Art PracticeVisual ArtsMoral NullityGerman LiteratureArt TheoryArt CriticismRadical AestheticArt EmperorLanguage StudiesIntellectual HistoryArt HistoryCritical TheoryVisual CultureHumanitiesContemporary ArtFalse LogicContemporary FictionExperimental AestheticGerman Cultural StudiesArtsFilm Studies
Like the great German critic Walter Benjamin, Rosenberg is a master of dialectics whose sense of art is continuous with his sense of society, and (also like Benjamin) bears no taint of compromised, out-of-work radicalism. Instead, his radicalism is very much at work, enabling him to spot and skewer fallacies, false logic and the camouflaged nudity that is a large part of the art emperor's new wardrobe. [The De-definition of Art] detects with great sensitivity the forces that are deflecting and pressuring art in the direction of esthetic and moral nullity. Jack Kroll, Newsweek