Mainstreams of Modern Art

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Mainstreams of Modern Art is a reference book by John Canaday. It comprehensively covers modern art from the start of Romanticism in the 1700s to Cubism and Abstract art in the early 20th century. Mainstreams enjoyed wide commercial and critical success, and was awarded the 1959 Athenæum of Philadelphia prize for literature[1].

It also contains a ten page appendix "Notes on Modern Architecture", the final five pages of which are devoted to criticism of Frank Lloyd Wright, whose design Canaday states "have failed disastrously." But in the same sentence, he also praised Wright's buildings as "some of the most beautiful structures of the century bearing his name." This, combined with Canaday's other outspoken views, led a group of artists, collectors, and academics to write a letter of protest to the New York Times[2].

A revised edition was published shortly before Canaday's death in 1985, and is still required reading at the university level in the United States[3] and worldwide[4].

[edit] References

Text

  • Canaday, John. Mainstreams of Modern Art. Wadsworth Publishing; 2nd Edition, 1981. ISBN 0-03-057638-5

Footnotes

  1. ^  Literary Award Winners, The Athenæum of Philadelphia
  2. ^  John Canaday, Duke University Libraries
  3. ^  Bibliography, ART 506: Art for the Talented and Gifted, Eastern Michigan University (Retrieved on 13 March 2005)
  4. ^  Required texts, Western Modern Art, University of Rajasthan, Jaipur