Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin

This article proposes a comparative study of the history of visual arts in Algeria and Tunisia from the 1960s to the 1980s. By drawing on texts produced in the wake of Algerian and Tunisian independence (e.g. exhibition catalogues published in-country or abroad, monographs and essays on art history)...

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Main Authors: Annabelle Boissier, Fanny Gillet
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: CNRS Éditions 2014-06-01
Series:L’Année du Maghreb
Subjects:
art
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/anneemaghreb/2096
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spelling doaj-665c3c7aeb3b4e2aba426a060f6e22982020-11-25T02:13:37ZfraCNRS ÉditionsL’Année du Maghreb1952-81082109-94052014-06-011020723210.4000/anneemaghreb.2096Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébinAnnabelle BoissierFanny GilletThis article proposes a comparative study of the history of visual arts in Algeria and Tunisia from the 1960s to the 1980s. By drawing on texts produced in the wake of Algerian and Tunisian independence (e.g. exhibition catalogues published in-country or abroad, monographs and essays on art history) we aim at analysing the shaping and evolution of discourses regarding art within two culturally close countries. If an initial assessment leads to an identification of common issues in each case, a more detailed study of sources allows us to reveal differences relating to their particular histories. This study also questions the homogeneity of reference works produced since the 1980s and how a history of the visual arts in each of these two countries has been formed and transmitted. Indeed, the authors of such works have established the timeline and refer to such a limited number of historical actors that it seems unlikely that these would be the only ones responsible for the emergence and institutionalization of the modern and contemporary art worlds. We support the assumption that an analysis of the literature and its evolution will offer a key to understanding the process by which the "glorious history" of the Algerian and Tunisian artistic movements was formed. We therefore propose to rethink the implementation of this dominant history by studying the process of writing art history.http://journals.openedition.org/anneemaghreb/2096arthistoriographyAlgeriaTunisianational identity
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annabelle Boissier
Fanny Gillet
spellingShingle Annabelle Boissier
Fanny Gillet
Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
L’Année du Maghreb
art
historiography
Algeria
Tunisia
national identity
author_facet Annabelle Boissier
Fanny Gillet
author_sort Annabelle Boissier
title Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
title_short Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
title_full Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
title_fullStr Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
title_full_unstemmed Ruptures, renaissances et continuités. Modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
title_sort ruptures, renaissances et continuités. modes de construction de l’histoire de l’art maghrébin
publisher CNRS Éditions
series L’Année du Maghreb
issn 1952-8108
2109-9405
publishDate 2014-06-01
description This article proposes a comparative study of the history of visual arts in Algeria and Tunisia from the 1960s to the 1980s. By drawing on texts produced in the wake of Algerian and Tunisian independence (e.g. exhibition catalogues published in-country or abroad, monographs and essays on art history) we aim at analysing the shaping and evolution of discourses regarding art within two culturally close countries. If an initial assessment leads to an identification of common issues in each case, a more detailed study of sources allows us to reveal differences relating to their particular histories. This study also questions the homogeneity of reference works produced since the 1980s and how a history of the visual arts in each of these two countries has been formed and transmitted. Indeed, the authors of such works have established the timeline and refer to such a limited number of historical actors that it seems unlikely that these would be the only ones responsible for the emergence and institutionalization of the modern and contemporary art worlds. We support the assumption that an analysis of the literature and its evolution will offer a key to understanding the process by which the "glorious history" of the Algerian and Tunisian artistic movements was formed. We therefore propose to rethink the implementation of this dominant history by studying the process of writing art history.
topic art
historiography
Algeria
Tunisia
national identity
url http://journals.openedition.org/anneemaghreb/2096
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