Transcultural Histories of Art and Artisanal Epistemologies, 9781032594491
Hardcover
Rethinking art history: Artisanal knowledge connects cultures, ideas, and things.
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Transcultural Histories of Art and Artisanal Epistemologies

knowledge to be made

$517.64

  • Hardcover

    246 pages

  • Release Date

    13 August 2025

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Summary

Transcultural Art: Redefining Artistry Through Artisanal Knowledge

This edited volume challenges European-centric conceptions of artistry, offering a fresh perspective on its history within a global context. It re-evaluates fundamental assumptions in art history, moving beyond traditional methodologies.

The book explores how artisanal knowledge broadens our understanding of cultural history. It liberates discourse from narratives of cultural development while still consideri…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781032594491
ISBN-10:1032594497
Series:Routledge Advances in Art and Visual Studies
Author:Claire Farago, Susan Lowish, Jens Baumgarten
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:Routledge
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:246
Release Date:13 August 2025
Weight:0g
Dimensions:246mm x 174mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“Transcultural Histories of Art and Artisanal Epistemologies: Knowledge to be Made is an impressive collection of studies from across continents that compellingly persuades art historians to bring making to the center of our enquiry into art. By placing the individual artist within a distributed network of places, peoples, materials, and technologies, it effectively undermines the evolutionist underpinnings of the discipline that flaunts the creative ‘genius’ at its pinnacle. The book shows the way to a non-hierarchical, transculturally formed art history to argue that the world’s conceptual knowledge about art was not exclusively produced in European lexical repositories.”

Monica Juneja, Senior Professor of Art History, University of Heidelberg, Germany & Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities, Shiv Nadar University, India.

“Transcultural Histories of Art and Artisanal Epistemologies: Knowledge to be Made invites us to reflect on ‘artisanal epistemologies’, exploring forms of knowledge that emerge from doings and materialities that cross worlds and intertwine with living cosmologies. The authors courageously open up the discipline to fields of knowledge and being that lie beyond its boundaries, suggesting the possibility of a radical and transformative interculturality, not only of the discipline, but of the relationship to the world that art engenders.”

Fernanda Pitta, Assistant Professor at MAC USP

“The editors are to be congratulated on producing a brave, engaging, and original volume. The book is superbly and collaboratively edited so that it can be read as a coherent whole. The concept of the artisanal challenges the distinction between “intellectual” and “practical” intelligence. Artisanal knowledge as a transcultural concept does indeed provide the basis for the development of cross-cultural art histories that focus on practice.”

Howard Morphy, Australian National University

About The Author

Claire Farago

Claire Farago (Ph.D., University of Virginia) is Professor Emerita at the University of Colorado Boulder. She has written widely on early modern art theory, historiography, cultural exchange, the materiality of the sacred, the history of style, and museology, including Writing Borderless Histories of Art: Human Exceptionalism and the Climate Crisis (2025).

Susan Lowish (Ph.D., Monash University, Melbourne) is Senior Lecturer in Australian Art History, University of Melbourne. She has published extensively on Indigenous collections, digital image archives for Australian art history, and rock art, including her award-winning book, Rethinking Australia’s Art History: The Challenge of Aboriginal Art (2018).

Jens Baumgarten (Ph.D., Hamburg University) is Professor of Art History at the Federal University of São Paulo, where he established one of the first autonomous departments of Art History in Brazil. He specializes in the early modern art history of Latin America and Europe, the historiography of art, and contemporary visual culture.

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