Anna C. Chave

Anna C. Chave
Nationality American
Education Reed College, Sorbonne, Harvard University, Yale University
Occupation Art historian, professor, art critic

Anna C. Chave is an art historian and professor at Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY).[1] She is best known for her research and publications on modern sculpture and the New York School. She has published many essays concerned with issues of gender and identity, reception and interpretation, mainly with respect to 20th century art.[2] Her artist subjects have ranged from early Pablo Picasso and Georgia O'Keeffe,[3] to Jackson Pollock[4] and Hannah Wilke.[5]

Academic career

Chave attended Reed College, the Sorbonne in Paris, and received her B.A. from Harvard University. She received her Ph.D. from Yale in 1982.

She is widely known for her revisionist readings of Minimalism, including "Minimalism and the Rhetoric of Power", and for her monographs on Rothko[6] and Brancusi[7] (Yale University Press, 1991 and 1993).

Bibliography

Selected books by Chave

Selected essays and articles by Chave

References

  1. "Faculty Bios, The Graduate Center".
  2. Chave, Anna (1990). "Minimalism and the Rhetoric of Power". Arts Magazine. 64 (5).
  3. Chave, Anna (1990). "O'Keeffe and the masculine gaze". Art in America. 781990: 114–125.
  4. Chave, Anna (1993). "Pollock and Krasner: script and postscript". Res: 95–111.
  5. Chave, Anna (2009). "I "Object": Hannah Wilke's Feminism". Art in America. 97 (3): 104–109.
  6. Chave, Anna (1989). Mark Rothko: subjects in abstraction. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300049619.
  7. Chave, Anna (1993). Constantin Brancusi: shifting the bases of art. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300055269.


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