Lives of the Imaginary Artists in Cold War California
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How artists created fictionalised identities to realise works that resisted political overreach and art historical conventions.
Lives of the Imaginary Artists in Cold War California explores how a group of real California artists created imaginary artists, engaging with the political climate of the Cold War era and frustrating the discipline of art history. They employed pseudonymity, obfuscation, anonymity, (auto)biografiction, imaginary portraiture, heteronymity, role-playing, doubling, and alter ego.
Often laced with humour, these exploits facilitated stylistic experimentation, provoking reactions from art viewers and governing authorities alike, and disrupting reliance on documentation and attribution within art history.
In the 1950s and early 1960s, Ed Kienholz, Walter Hopps, Robert Alexander, Wally Hedrick, George Herms, and Wallace Berman activated imagined and secret identities, provoking reactions within a conservative environment gripped by communist paranoia. As political concerns shifted in the 1960s and 1970s to movements for peace and equality, artists including Billy Al Bengston, Ed Ruscha, Joe Goode, Lynda Benglis, Larry Bell, Judy Chicago, and Eleanor Antin redirected these tactics to probe the rise of celebrity culture and the administrative state. These practices also became the precursor for later interventions by Bruce Conner, Asco, Allen Ruppersberg, Senga Nengudi, and others.
Considering a compelling range of visual material, including paintings, sculptures, and performed intrusions as well as publications, postcards, and advertisements, Monica Steinberg examines why these imaginary artists appeared when and where they didβand to what ends.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9780226839639
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
Format: Hardback
Date Published: 26 January 2026
Country: United States
Imprint: University of Chicago Press
Illustration: 111 color plates, 34 halftones
Audience: Professional and scholarly
DIMENSIONS
Width: 191.0mm
Height: 254.0mm
Weight: 454g
Pages: 460
Collections
About the Author
Monica Steinberg is an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong. She has contributed to exhibition catalogs published by the Fitzwilliam Museum, Imago Mundi Collection, and the National Academy Museum and School of Fine Art, and her articles have appeared in Crime Media Culture, Art Journal, Panorama, Oxford Art Journal, Art History, American Art, Grey Room, and the Archives of American Art Journal.
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