Art History I: Primitive Art and the Museum
Commercial African masks for sale. Source: Wikipedia Thesis This article argues that Jean Baudrillard’s critique of “primitive art” in The Mirror of Production challenges the very foundations of Western art history. According to Baudrillard, museums do not simply preserve cultural difference; they neutralize it by translating symbolic objects into Western aesthetic categories. Ritual masks, icons, tapestries, and ceremonial artifacts become intelligible only after being transformed into “art.” The museum therefore functions not merely as a space of preservation, but as a mechanism of conceptual domestication The Museum and the Question of “Art” One of the most provocative moments in The Mirror of Production appears in Jean Baudrillard’s discussion of so-called “primitive art.” At first glance, Baudrillard seems to be addressing anthropology or aesthetics. In reality, his argument reaches much further. What he ultimately questions is the universality of the category “art” itself. ...