TMW MEDIA GROUP

You, Myself And Art - The Cold War, When Art DVD

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SKU:
42771883
UPC:
709629253421
MPN:
14760831
Condition:
New
MSRP: $53.00
$46.09
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Description

Discover how art was used in the USA and the former USSR after WWII as a way to express opposing political choices and ideologies and as a means of exporting freedom around the World. There was a strong relationship between the arts and politics during the Cold War. The West excelled in Jazz and Abstract Painting and the former USSR excelled in Ballet and Realism Art. This period was commonly known as The Cultural Cold War. Each country was promoting their own culture and Arts through propaganda campaigns. It was a freedom of expression that they were defending because in Russia, you could not say whatever you wanted... Through time and civilization, the elite always understood the power of images and therefore art became a logical tool for influencing people and establishing a hierarchy. After World War II the enemy shifted from Germany and fascism to the Soviet Union. Artists and intellectuals we're asked to choose. If you were an American, you were an abstractionist and if you were Soviet you were a realist. In the mid-twentieth century, Modern Art and design represented liberalism, individualism in a Free Society. Jackson Pollock's gestural style, drew an effective counterpoint to Nazi and then Soviet, oppression. Modernism became a weapon of the Cold War. Abstract art is about individualism, not about collectivism. The Russians viewed Abstract expressionism as confusing, decadent and dangerous, it was very American and they weren't sure how to deal with it. Because of the CIA's efforts, Abstract Art became the leader in art during the Cold War. It was a way to reach the unreachable, globalization through the simplicity of art.
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Additional Information

Format:
DVD
Genre:
Educational & Learning Games
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