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Connected in Isolation: Land and Landscape in New Mexico and the Greater Southwest

Posted on:2017-03-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of RochesterCandidate:Guzman, Alicia InezFull Text:PDF
GTID:1469390014465349Subject:Art history
Abstract/Summary:
This study analyzes New Mexico and the Greater Southwest's conflicted place between the U.S. and Mexico within art and visual culture, from the nineteenth century into the present. Over the course of four case studies, "Connected in Isolation: Land and Landscape in New Mexico and the Greater Southwest" investigates disparate political and aesthetic imaginaries centering on land, especially following the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. After the Mexican American War and the ensuing Treaty, the United States annexed more than half of Mexico's holdings, including much of the current southwestern region, which had seen Mexican and Spanish systems of governance in prior centuries. The advent of American Imperialism accelerated Anglo expansion into the region and proffered narratives of "discovery" about land, resources and people. The incongruous forms of land use that resulted reveal epistemological divides in how land and space were and continue to be conceptualized, occupied and represented. In particular, I examine how race, class and ethnicity produce space, spatial subjectivities and representational modes across media: cartography, painting, photography and land art. Building upon diverse literature on the history of westward expansion, land grant history and the emergence of artist colonies and a southwestern aesthetic imagination, I examine how the idea of the Southwest as a rugged final frontier for expansion and aesthetic transcendence intersects with complex histories of tenure, cosmologies and experiential engagements. The first chapter analyzes how American expansion was a spatial and discursive process that pitted the ideology of the national grid against other regional modes of cartography over the course of the nineteenth century. The second chapter explores spatial subjectivities that center on loss (from the loss of ancestral lands to the lamentations of modernization), examining in particular how penitence is practiced locally and co-opted by eastern transplants in the years bookending World War I. The following chapter looks at the post-World War II emergence of land art and its relationship to histories of westward expansion, landscape painting, minimalism and counterculture. The last chapter analyzes a contemporary land-based collaboration on the Navajo Nation and its relationship to indigenous cosmology, identity politics and globalization.
Keywords/Search Tags:New mexico and the greater, Land, Analyzes, Chapter
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