Librarian View

LEADER 04709cam a2200457 4500
001 16486073
005 20230224173255.0
008 221109s mx 000 0 spa d
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|a 9786073059930 |q (UNAM)
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|a 6073059930
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|z 978841923219 |q (RM Verlag)
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|a 0000011973
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|a 16486073
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|a HKB |b eng |c HKB |e rda |d CtY
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|a n-mx---
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|a 1350553347
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|a NK844 |b M63 2022
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|a Una modernidad hecha a mano : |b diseño artesanal en México, 1952-2022 / |c [curaduría : Ana Elena Mallet]
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|a Diseño artesanal en México, 1952-2022
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|a Primera edición.
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|a Ciudad de Mexico : |b MUAC, Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, UNAM : |b Editorial RM, |c 2022.
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|a 87 pages : |b illustrations ; |c 22 cm.
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|a text |b txt |2 rdacontent
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|a still image |b sti |2 rdacontent
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|a unmediated |b n |2 rdamedia
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|a volume |b nc |2 rdacarrier
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|a Folio MUAC ; |v 093
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|a Published on the occasion of the exhibition "A Handmade Modernism.Artisanal Design in Mexico, 1952 2022" (May 14 to November 13, 2022) held at MUAC, Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, UNAM, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City.
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|a Presentación / Arturo Talavera Autrique -- Una modernidad hecha a mano / Ana Elena Mallet.
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|a This exhibition proposes to review the notion of craft design that was produced and theorized in Mexico from 1950 to the present, tracing a genealogy of artists, designers, and craftspeople who strove to generate a hybrid, mestizo material culture and thereby create an imaginary for a new way of life.This showœs starting point is the work of Clara Porset, the Cuban-Mexican designer who organized the countryœs first design exhibition in 1952, El arte en la vida diaria: Exposición de objetos de buen diseño hechos en México. For Porset, the contents and layout of this show constituted an argument for what national design should pursue with regard to modernity. The designer sought to resolve the tension between industrialization and manual labor by way of a three-fold vision: design, craft-making, and industry should come together to offer society accessible, socially and aesthetically meaningful objects of design.The second part of the exhibition consists of a guided tour through Porsetœs earliest research into and arguments about the origin, revision, and analysis of Mexican vernacular furnishing, her decision to opt for a socially informed design, and her rallying cry for a national design movement associated with the past, with an eye toward building a functional, economically viable, and unobstructed present. The third part explores how handmade products were revalued in the context of the developmentalist project of the mid-twentieth century. From 1950 to 1970, there was a push for mixed (industrial and craft) production in various parts of the country much of which was linked to the arrival of foreigners with projects for social and economic development that sought to stimulate the craft trades and drive commercial tourism. Mexico City, the Bajío region (Guanajuato, Michoacán, and Jalisco), Oaxaca, Morelos, and Guerrero were fundamentally the places where these design centers developed.This exhibition concludes by opening out onto the panorama of Mexican design today, marked consciously or unconsciously by the foundations that Porset had laid down in her arguments about craft design and the modern design movement in Mexico. This section is an opportunity to identify a group of designers and objects that have continued to make use of local repertoires, craft practices, traditional materials, working by hand, and collaborative projects in order to nourish their work with a social and sustainable perspective while developing new languages.
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|a In Spanish.
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0
|a Folk art |z Mexico |x History |y 20th century |v Exhibitions.
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|a Decorative arts |z Mexico |x History |v Exhibitions.
650
  
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|a Art and industry |z Mexico |x History |y 20th century |v Exhibitions.
700
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|a Mallet, Ana Elena, |e curator, |e writer of supplementary textual content. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/ns2018001640
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|a Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. |b Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, |e host institution, |e publisher. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2009099541
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0
|a Folio MUAC ; |v 093. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2014058885
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|a Haas Arts Library |b HAAS ARTS LIBRARY, Art & Arch Collection >> On Order|DELIM|16396687
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|a 2023-02-24T09:18:54.000Z
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|b 30.00 |f 80303
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|c On Order
Timestamp: 2024-08-28T10:49:00.872Z

Geographic Authorities

Variants from 185828 (matched with [Mexico])

Anáhuac
Estados Unidos Mexicanos
Maxico
Méjico
Mekishiko
Meḳsiḳe
Meksiko
Meksyk
Messico
Mexican United States
Mexique (Country)
República Mexicana
Stany Zjednoczone Meksyku
United Mexican States
United States of Mexico
מקסיקו
メキシコ
Timestamp: 2024-08-26T15:44:32.355Z

Author Authorities

Variants from 2874944 (matched with [Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo])

Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)
MuAC
University Museum of Contemporary Art (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Méxio)
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. University Museum of Contemporary Art
Timestamp: 2024-08-26T15:59:54.766Z

Variants from 3624961 (matched with [Mallet, Ana Elena])

Mallet Cárdenas, Ana Elena
Cárdenas, Ana Elena Mallet
Timestamp: 2024-08-26T16:04:11.428Z

Subject Authorities

Variants from 930273 (matched with [Art and industry])

Advertising, Art in
Industry and art
Timestamp: 2024-08-26T15:49:00.119Z

Variants from 944846 (matched with [Decorative arts])

Applied arts
Art industries and trade
Timestamp: 2024-08-26T15:49:04.459Z

Variants from 952030 (matched with [Folk art])

Peasant art
Popular art
Timestamp: 2024-08-26T15:49:06.554Z