Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Whatever Happened to the Frontier? Performing Provincialism in Post-War Los Angeles

Bradnock, Lucy

Authors

Lucy Bradnock



Abstract

During the 1950s and 1960s, critics writing about art on America’s West Coast often treated it as provincial. At the same time, artists working in Los Angeles engaged in projects of self-fashioning that frequently alluded to frontiersmen and cowboys. This article examines how the rhetoric of the historic frontier and the Old West were deployed in the post-war decades by both writers and artists. It considers the ways in which artists such as Ed Ruscha, Joe Goode and Barbara Smith incorporated these references as a means to perform, undermine or challenge regionalism and provincialism.

Citation

Bradnock, L. (2019). Whatever Happened to the Frontier? Performing Provincialism in Post-War Los Angeles. Tate Papers, 32,

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 12, 2019
Online Publication Date Dec 2, 2019
Publication Date Dec 2, 2019
Deposit Date Jan 1, 2020
Journal Tate Papers
Print ISSN 1753-9854
Publisher Tate Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 32
Keywords American art, Los Angeles art, provincialism, regionalism
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3652385
Publisher URL https://www.tate.org.uk/research/publications/tate-papers/32/whatever-happened-frontier


Downloadable Citations