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Art Under Control in North Korea

Art Under Control in North Korea
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 5.0/5Average rating of 5.0/5Average rating of 5.0/5Average rating of 5.0/5Average rating of 5.0/5

List Price: $35.00
Asia Trips Trips Price: $35.00
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Manufacturer: Reaktion Books

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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 709.5193
EAN: 9781861892362
ISBN: 1861892365
Label: Reaktion Books
Manufacturer: Reaktion Books
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 192
Publication Date: 2005-08-15
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Studio: Reaktion Books

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Editorial Reviews:

Nuclear bombs and geopolitical controversy are often the first things associated with North Korea and its volatile leader Kim Jong-II. Yet behind the secretive curtain of this isolated nation also lies a little-known and slowly expanding world of art.

Art Under Control in North Korea is the first Western publication to explore the state-controlled role of art in North Korea. This timely volume places North Korean art in its historical, political, and social contexts, with a discussion on the state system of cultivating and promoting artists and an examination of the range of art produced, from painting and calligraphy to architecture and applied art. Portal offers an incisive analysis that compares the dictatorial control exerted over artists by North Korean leaders to that of past regimes. She also examines the ways in which archaeology has been employed for political ends to legitimize the present regime.

Art Under Control in North Korea is an intriguing and vibrant volume that explores the creation of art under totalitarian rule and the ways art can subvert a dictatorial regime.
(06/01/2005)


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: a fascinating book with important information on north korea
Comment: It is quite a delight these days to read a book on North Korea that manages to be politically relevant and insightful without focusing on the country's drive to acquire nuclear weapons, its appalling human rights record, or the self-absorbed behavior of its current leader, Kim Chong-il. This refreshingly different approach is what Jane Portal offers in her 2005 publication, "Art Under Control in North Korea." Portal, an assistant curator of Asian Art at the British Museum and author of a previous book on the history of Korean art, has worked hard to provide a political context for the arts in North Korea, and, overall, has proven herself a reliable scholar on this front.

That a study of the arts in North Korea should be so important is due to two circumstances: in nearly all cases, the visual, performing, and written arts are controlled by the state and the official micromanaging them since the early 1970s at least is none other than Kim Chong-il. The fact that art exists to serve the state is tackled in an introduction that puts the North Korean arts scene into historical context by offering valuable comparative background on the USSR, China, and Nazi Germany, and there then follow two more chapters that review North Korea's history. From Chapter 4 forward, Portal takes a close look at how art has been used to promote the cult of the two Kims--Kim Chong-il and his late father Kim Il-song. The changing themes and styles in art, the institutions set up to create the art, and timelines for the dedication of particularly important public works of art are all dealt with in a neutral, businesslike manner.


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