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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > From 1900 > Art styles, 1960 -
Highlighting both the relevance of Banksy's street art and how his
impact has continued to spread, Planet Banksy brings together some
of the very best pieces of art from all corners of the world that
have been inspired by Banksy, as well as featuring some of his own
innovative, profound and controversial work. 'A thought-provoking
comparison with the works of his students.' Publishers Weekly
______ Banksy is the world's foremost graffiti artist, his work
adorning streets, walls and bridges across nations and continents.
His stencil designs are instantly recognizable and disturbingly
precise in their social and political commentary, flavoured with
subtle humour and self-awareness. More popular than ever, Banksy
has spawned countless imitators, students and fans alike, his fame
- although unlooked-for - inevitably transmitting his ideas and
work to the international arena. With a range of topics for the
graffiti lover, coming from a variety of inspirational sources,
this book provides an overview of how Banksy's work is changing the
face of modern art - as well as the urban landscape. Distilling his
influence and his genius into an easily accessible full-colour 128
pages, this is the perfect purchase for any fan of Banksy or the
graffiti art scene.
'A woman can carry a bag, but it is the shoe that carries the
woman' - Christian Louboutin Among designers of luxury shoes, there
is one whose designs are instantly recognizable: Christian
Louboutin. His iconic red soles can be seen everywhere from the red
carpet, the silver screen and the catwalk to city streets around
the world. From his early life in Paris to the founding of his
first store in 1992, and from the red carpet to his global
domination of the luxury shoe market, Little Book of Christian
Louboutin charts the rise of the world's most celebrated shoe
designer. Images of his designs past and present are accompanied by
captivating text, describing the rise and rise of the king of shoe
design.
The experiences of a diverse range of progressive theater and
performance makers in their own words. Curated stories from over 75
interviews and informal exchanges offer insight into the field and
point out limitations due to discrimination and unequal opportunity
for performance artists in the United States over the past 55
years. In this work, performers, often unknown beyond their
immediate audience, articulate diverse influences. They also
reflect on how artists are educated and supported, what content is
deemed valuable and how it is brought to bear, as well as which
audiences are welcome and whether cross-community exchange is
encouraged. The book's voices bring the reader from 1965 through
the first wave of the covid-19 pandemic in 2020. They point to more
diverse and inclusive practices and give hope for the future of the
art.
This book expands understanding of conditions defining the creation
and circulation of contemporary dance that differ across Europe. It
focuses upon festival-making connected with the Balkan regional
project 'Nomad Dance Academy' (NDA), the book highlights collective
approaches to sustain a theorisation of festivals using the
concepts of dissensus and imperceptible politics. Drawing from
anthropological methods, three festivals PLESkavica, Slovenia,
Kondenz, Serbia and LocoMotion, North Macedonia are explored
through social, political, and historical currents affecting
curatorial practice. This book closely follows how festival-makers
navigate the values of international development that during and
after the Yugoslav wars looked to art as part of peacekeeping and
nation-building processes, and coincided with increasing discourse
and practices of contemporary dance that gained momentum in the
1980s alongside European festivalisation. I show how contemporary
dance acts as an agent for transformation, but also a carrier of
older forms of social organisation, reflecting methods and values
of Yugoslav Worker Self-management that are deployed by the groups
creating the festivals. This book will be of interest to dance
scholars as well as researchers tracing the long-term effects of
the dissolution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
This book responds to recent debates on cultural participation and
the relevancy of music composed today with the first large-scale
audience experience study on contemporary classical music. Through
analysing how existing audience members experience live
contemporary classical music, this book seeks to make data-informed
contributions to future discussions on audience diversity and
accessibility. The author takes a multidimensional view of audience
experience, looking at how sociodemographic factors and the frames
of social context and concert format shape aesthetic responses and
experiences in the concert hall. The book presents quantitative and
qualitative audience data collected at twelve concerts in ten
different European countries, analysing general trends alongside
case studies. It also offers the first large-scale comparisons
between the concert experiences and tastes of contemporary
classical and classical music audiences. Contemporary classical
music is critically discussed as a 'high art subculture' rife with
contradictions and conflicts around its cultural value. This book
sheds light on how audiences negotiate the tensions between
experimentalism and accessibility that currently define this genre.
It provides insights relevant to academics from audience research
in the performing arts and from musicology, as well as to
institutions, practitioners, and artists.
Emerging technologies enable a wide variety of creative expression,
from music and video to innovations in visual art. These
aesthetics, when properly explored, can enable enhanced
communication between all kinds of people and cultures. The
Handbook of Research on Digital Media and Creative Technologies
considers the latest research in education, communication, and
creative social expression using digital technologies. By exploring
advances in art and culture across national and sociological
borders, this handbook serves to provide artists, theorists,
information communication specialists, and researchers with the
tools they need to effectively disseminate their ideas across the
digital plane.
Dramaturgy, in its many forms, is a fundamental and indispensable
element of contemporary theatre. In its earliest definition, the
word itself means a comprehensive theory of "play making." Although
it initially grew out of theatre, contemporary dramaturgy has made
enormous advances in recent years, and it now permeates all kinds
of narrative forms and structures: from opera to performance art;
from dance and multimedia to filmmaking and robotics. In our
global, mediated context of multinational group collaborations that
dissolve traditional divisions of roles as well as unbend
previously intransigent rules of time and space, the dramaturg is
also the ultimate globalist: intercultural mediator, information
and research manager, media content analyst, interdisciplinary
negotiator, social media strategist. This collection focuses on
contemporary dramaturgical practice, bringing together
contributions not only from academics but also from prominent
working dramaturgs. The inclusion of both means a strong level of
engagement with current issues in dramaturgy, from the impact of
social media to the ongoing centrality of interdisciplinary and
intermedial processes. The contributions survey the field through
eight main lenses: world dramaturgy and global perspective
dramaturgy as function, verb and skill dramaturgical leadership and
season planning production dramaturgy in translation adaptation and
new play development interdisciplinary dramaturgy play analysis in
postdramatic and new media dramaturgy social media and audience
outreach. Magda Romanska is Visiting Associate Professor of Slavic
Languages and Literatures at Harvard University, Associate
Professor of Theatre and Dramaturgy at Emerson College, and
Dramaturg for Boston Lyric Opera. Her books include The
Post-Traumatic Theatre of Grotowski and Kantor (2012), Boguslaw
Schaeffer: An Anthology (2012), and Comedy: An Anthology of Theory
and Criticism (2014).
This anthology examines maternity in contemporary performance at
the intersection of a wide range of topics from nationhood to
mental health, queer parenting, embodied dramaturgy, cultural
practice, and immigration. Across the breadth of these themes, we
interrogate the cultural implications and politics of how we
script, perform, receive, and define mothers, challenging many of
the normalizing and patriarchal tropes associated with the
mother-as-character. This book includes critical essays examining
twenty-first century dramatic literature, first-hand ethnographic
accounts of motherhood in practice, interviews, feminist
manifestos, and artist reflections. In its deliberately curated
variety, this collection seeks to resist homogeneity and offer
instead a range of approaches to key questions: what versions of
motherhood get staged, and why? And what do dramatic
representations tell us about the role of mothers in our own
fraught contemporary moment? This collection will be of great
interest to those in academia who are teaching, researching, or
studying in the fields of Theatre and Performance Studies, American
Studies, and Feminist and Gender Studies.
The Culture Factory: Architecture and the Contemporary Art Museum
explores the key battlegrounds in the design of the
contemporary-art museum, describing the intersection of art,
aesthetics and politics at the highest levels, and the commitment
of states, cities and wealthy individuals to the display of art.
Global in scope, the book examines key examples from Europe and the
Americas to contemporary China. It describes museum building as the
projection of political power, but also as a desire to acquire
power. So it is a book about ambitious peripheries as much as the
traditional centres: Dundee and Bilbao as well as New York and
Paris. It is commonplace to assume that the contemporary-art museum
has become ever more spectacular, and the place of art ever more
subservient within it. This book argues that a tendency to
spectacle coexists with another equally powerful tendency, to make
art museums that celebrate the artistic process, typically
attempting to recreate the feeling of the artist's studio. That
tendency is strongly represented in the designs for the Centre
Georges Pompidou, completed in 1977, and arguably in the many
contemporary art museums which have adapted former industrial
buildings. Richard J. Williams's stimulating text includes many
historical examples to illustrate how we got to where we are now,
from the Centre Pompidou in Paris, to the Guggenheim museums in New
York and Bilbao, London's Tate Modern, Oscar Niemeyer's work in
Brazil and beyond, and the 798 Art District in Beijing.
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Painted Walls Havana
(Hardcover)
Amir Saarony; Photographs by Jose A Rey; Introduction by Alejandro Zamora Montes
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R3,126
Discovery Miles 31 260
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This is the first major critical study of the art of Cornish
painter Kurt Jackson. Jackson's landscapes have been exhibited
widely, and are becoming more popular.
Told in his own words, in response to questions from the writer and
art critic Andrew Lambirth, this book chronicles Andrew Logan's
life and work through expressive anecdote and factual recollection.
Reflections is a look back, but also a look at the present and a
look forward: it is about the meaning of Andrew's world and the
sculpture he has made to fill it, and about his approach to art, to
friendship and to living in London and Wales. The Alternative Miss
World, founded by Andrew in 1972, is at the heart of his
philosophy, not just the world's greatest drag act (though it is
this too), but an exhilarating celebration of the transformative
power of the imagination. Andrew's work, which is all about joy and
beauty, is inspiring and uplifting. This book, based upon
discursive interviews dealing with all periods of his career,
explains and contextualises it fully for the first time.
In What a Body Can Do, Ben Spatz develops, for the first time, a
rigorous theory of embodied technique as knowledge. He argues that
viewing technique as both training and research has much to offer
current debates over the role of practice in the university,
including the debates around "practice as research." Drawing on
critical perspectives from the sociology of knowledge,
phenomenology, dance studies, enactive cognition, and other areas,
Spatz argues that technique is a major area of historical and
ongoing research in physical culture, performing arts, and everyday
life.
Maternal bodies in the visual arts brings images of the maternal
and pregnant body into the centre of art-historical enquiry. By
exploring religious, secular and scientific traditions as well as
contemporary art practices, it shows the power of visual imagery in
framing our understanding of maternal bodies and affirming or
contesting prevailing maternal ideals. The book reassesses
historical models and, in drawing on original case studies, shows
how visual practices by artists may offer the means of
reconfiguring the maternal. It will appeal to students, academics
and researchers in art history, gender studies and cultural
studies, as well as to general readers interested in the maternal
and visual culture. -- .
Explore Kerby Rosanes's intricate and vibrant world in this
striking jigsaw puzzle. Piece together shape-shifting creatures as
they morph into a magnificent tiger in the night, featured in his
bestselling book, Animorphia.
Gives a fresh and contemporary take on the ways in which
contemporary US sexual politics plays out on its biggest stage with
analyses of Promises, Promises, Newsies, Hedwig and the Angry Inch,
The Color Purple, and Frozen. Written accessibly and clearly for
all levels of student and scholar in musical theatre as well as
interdisciplinary areas of queer, gender, and cultural studies. The
most up to date study available of Broadway's cultural politics.
Biennials: The Exhibitions we Love to Hate examines one of the most
significant recent transitions in the contemporary art world: the
proliferation of large-scale international recurrent survey shows
of contemporary art, commonly referred to as contemporary
biennials. Since the mid-1980s biennials have been instrumental in
shaping curating as an autonomous practice. These exhibitions are
also said to have provided increased visibility for certain types
of new art practices, notably those that are socially and
politically committed, research-based and site-specific, and to
have undermined some of the more traditional art media, such as
painting, drawing or sculpture. They have been responsible for
substantially reshaping the contemporary art world and disrupting
the existing value chain of the art market, which now relies on
biennials as much as it does on major museums' acquisitions and
exhibitions. Rafal Niemojewski, Director of the Biennial
Foundation, deftly unpicks the critical discussion and controversy
surrounding contemporary biennials. Branded by some critics as
showcases of neo-liberalism run amok, in which culture has become
synonymous with the dollar-generating leisure industry, biennials
have also been associated with the production of monumental
artworks which are both highly consumable and photogenic
(Instagrammable). The exhibitions we love to hate? This engaging
publication makes an essential contribution to a fascinating
cultural debate.
The New Cinematic Weird argues that weird fiction is rising also in
audiovisual culture. Presenting several detailed analyses of weird
cinematic works, the book shows how the new cinematic weird is best
understood as atmospheric worldings - affective intensities that
suffuse the experience of the cinematic weird. The weird exists as
an experiential field, an inflation of the world. These worldings
disclose a variety of experiences. The book engagingly shows how
creepy, unsettling, ominous, uneasy, and eerie atmospheres provide
a way into the weird experience. This book is important to anyone
interested in the audiovisual weird, cinematic atmospheres, how
audiovisual media produce worlds, and how weird fiction challenges
our conception of the way the world is.
A fresh approach to the theatre text for the Twenty First Century,
including recent developments in the fields of technology,
publishing and theatre-making. Intended for scholars and
upper-level students of theatre studies and performance studies.
Gives a much fresher and more comprehensive perspective than
previous work in this area, particularly in regard to topics like
technology and digital performance.
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