About the Author:
James Meyer is a curator of Modern Art at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. He was previously the Winship Distinguished Research Associate Professor of Art History at Emory University and deputy director and chief curator of the Dia Art Foundation.
Review:
"Blending criticism, memoir, and theory, the author explores the enduring influence of the sixties on art today. Analyzing works such as An-My Lê’s photos of Vietnam military reënactments, Kerry James Marshall’s enigmatic elegies to slain heroes of the civil-rights movement, and reimaginings by more than one artist of Robert Smithson’s evanescent earthworks, Meyer notes the tendency both to interrogate the dreamy impulses of the 'good Sixties'—'the last period of world revolution'—and to reflect the entropy, trauma, and war of the 'bad Sixties.' Many of the artists here, and Meyer himself, feel that they just missed out on something big: as children in the sixties, they were 'imprinted with the imagery of a momentous period they barely glimpsed.'" (The New Yorker)
"The Art of Return: The Sixties & Contemporary Culture offers a thoughtful account of how art and history inform each other, even in postmodern art. Meyer examines a generation of artists—his own—who use their work to remember the 1960s. They were only children during Camelot and Civil Rights and the Summer of Love, and later felt they'd missed out on a revolutionary time. Like 19th century Romantics born too late for Napoleon becoming obsessed with his memory, these 'Sixties children' live with a 'gnawing sense of belatedness' driving them 'to take charge of the history we did not experience; it goads us to understand what happened—to reconstruct, reimagine, and retell.'" (The Washington Free Beacon)
“No one lives by decades—no one looked up on December 31, 1969, and said, ‘Oh, no! It’s almost over!’—and yet the Sixties, like the Dude, abides. It functions variously as fetish, lucky charm, standard, or whip—chaos and confusion, destruction and the devil’s own playground to some, a time of hot desire and extravagant dreams that ignited the fuses of possibility for others. The best of times and the worst of times. Meyer dives into that maelstrom with passion, courage, and clarifying intelligence. He emerges with a striking and sensitive portrait of that time, and of our own time, that moves beyond myth and symbol and into the heart of life as it’s actually lived—contradictory, unfinished, trembling, and real.” (Bill Ayers, author of Fugitive Days: A Memoir and Public Enemy: Confessions of an American Dissident)
“Meyer is a critic and art historian of extraordinary rigor and insight, and there are few who are better equipped to write on the ‘long’ Sixties. The Art of Return is a striking and generous reflection on that moment’s effect as reimagined by artists, writers, filmmakers, and art historians. Meyer is to be especially commended for his capacious analyses of histories too often marginalized in art-historical treatments of the long Sixties and the connections he draws in taking a more global view of art history.” (Pamela Lee, author of New Games: Postmodernism after Contemporary Art)
“In this marvelously original, insightful, and timely book, Meyer draws from the work of artists and theoreticians who have helped to shape late-modern and contemporary art and effectively folds the legacies of the 1960s onto current artistic practices and concerns. Written with a literary flair and urgency that is at times breathtaking, the author’s impassioned arguments, dialogues, and reinterpretations are at once inherently allusive and personal, and yet utterly convincing in the way they address questions that go to the heart of artistic production today.” (Alexander Alberro, author of Abstraction in Reverse)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.