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University of California Press

About the Book

Slant Steps explores the vital role of the semi-periphery—artistic communities working between the provinces and the metropole. Premised on the collective fascination with the found object Slant Step, the book details a history of encounters among artists, filmmakers, critics, and others operating in and out of the Bay Area during the long 1960s. They revised the terms of the counterculture, the appeal of consumer goods, and the surfaces and materials of industrial design and contemporary sculpture. Whether extending to international exchanges or shrinking to local coteries, these circles helped develop process, funk, and conceptual art as they forged new directions for the art world and its members. Yet when these groups degraded their own works alongside those of their rivals, they made their political and aesthetic commitments difficult to decipher, reorganizing the ties between the visual arts and the New Left. Merging sociologies of art with the tradition of social art history, Jacob Stewart-Halevy uncovers the oblique perspectives and values of the semi-periphery, revealing its enduring impact upon contemporary art, above all in the field of pedagogy.

About the Author

Jacob Stewart-Halevy is Assistant Professor in the Department of History of Art and Architecture at Tufts University. 

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Table of Contents

Introduction 
1. Waste Makers 
2. Parading the Fetish
3. Funk 
4. Lax Behavior 
5. Shoddy Meaning
6. Gatekeeping Rituals 
Conclusion: Semi-Peripheral Development

Acknowledgments 
Notes 
Illustration Credits
Index

Reviews

"Beautifully written and filled with many hilarious moments, Slant Steps is an elegant meditation on 'funk' sculpture in California in the 1960s.  This book engages with the moral dilemmas of self-positioning for artists, critics, and institutions alike."—Richard Cándida Smith, author of The Modern Moves West: California Artists and Democratic Culture in the Twentieth Century

"Through brilliant analysis, Stewart-Halevy follows the path of an ordinary-looking object as it came to the attention of various parts of the late twentieth-century American art world. What he uncovers is the dynamics of art-world political life as it molds and is molded by history and social organization."—Howard S. Becker, author of Art Worlds

Awards

  • Media Ecology Association Book Award Finalist 2021 2021, Media Ecology Association