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Lives of the Imaginary Artists in Cold War California

How artists created fictionalized identities to realize works that resisted political overreach and art historical conventions.
 
This book explores how a group of real California artists created imaginary artists, engaging with the political climate of the Cold War era and frustrating the discipline of art history. They employed pseudonymity, obfuscation, anonymity, (auto)biografiction, imaginary portraiture, heteronymity, role-playing, doubling, and alter ego. Often laced with humor, these exploits facilitated stylistic experimentation, provoking reactions from art viewers and governing authorities alike, and disrupting reliance on documentation and attribution within art history.
 
In the 1950s and early 1960s, Ed Kienholz, Walter Hopps, Robert Alexander, Wally Hedrick, George Herms, and Wallace Berman activated imagined and secret identities, provoking reactions within a conservative environment gripped by communist paranoia. As political concerns shifted in the 1960s and 1970s to movements for peace and equality, artists including Billy Al Bengston, Ed Ruscha, Joe Goode, Lynda Benglis, Larry Bell, Judy Chicago, Lowell Darling, and Eleanor Antin redirected these tactics to probe the rise of celebrity culture and the administrative state. These practices also became the precursor for later interventions by Bruce Conner, Asco, Allen Ruppersberg, Senga Nengudi, and others.
 
Considering a compelling range of visual material, including paintings, sculptures, and performed intrusions as well as publications, postcards, and advertisements, Monica Steinberg examines why these imaginary artists appeared when and where they did—and to what ends.
 

408 pages | 111 color plates, 34 halftones | 7 1/2 x 10

Art: American Art, Art--General Studies

Reviews

“Interdisciplinary and archivally rich, Lives of the Imaginary Artists in Cold War California provides a fascinating account of how multiple artists based in California in the mid-twentieth century invented fictional identities. Steinberg expertly examines the different strategies adopted to create imaginary artists whose identities and creative output toyed with the very principles of archival evidence, biographical documentation, and aesthetic attribution while simultaneously navigating the social and political complexities of the Cold War.”

Cécile Whiting, author of "Pop L.A.: Art and the City in the 1960s"

“I read this book to find myself. I’m on page 1.”

Dudley Finds (Lowell Darling), Fat City School of Finds Art

“Pantale Xantos, go fuck yourself.”

Love, Eric Hammerscoffer (George Herms)

“The Information Man knew too much. He had to go.” 

Edward (Still Looking for the Real Killer) Ruscha

“This space for rent.”

Dr. Lux (Larry Bell)

“After 53 years of my peaceful reign, I Charley 1, ‘The King of Solana Beach,’ call on my subjects to help defend our kingdom from the usurpers in the east.”

The King (Eleanor Antin)

Table of Contents

Introduction: Imaginary Lives
1. On Pseudoautonymy: Maurice Syndell
2. On Obfuscation: Wally Hedrick
3. On Fictional Creativity: George Herms and Wallace Berman
4. On Role-Playing: Billy Al Bengston, Edward Ruscha, Joe Goode, and Lynda Benglis
5. On Doubling: Larry Bell and Judy Chicago
6. On Historical Fictions: Eleanor Antin
Conclusion: Imaginary Afterlives

Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

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