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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > General
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iARTistas #10
(Paperback)
Kjetil Jul; Michelle McEwen, Edward Nudelman
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R438
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Bios for our contributors may be found on our web site
iartistas.squarespace.com.
The title FRAGMENTS describes through the author's original art and
poetry, pieces of memory from a lifetime of creative activity.
Since its invention by Andrea Alciato, the emblem is inextricably
connected to the natural world. Alciato and his followers drew
massively their inspiration from it. For their information about
nature, the emblem authors were greatly indebted to ancient natural
history, the medieval bestiaries, and the 15th- and 16th-century
proto-emblematics, especially the imprese. The natural world became
the main topic of, for instance, Camerarius's botanical and
zoological emblem books, and also of the 'applied' emblematics in
drawings and decorative arts. Animal emblems are frequently quoted
by naturalists (Gesner, Aldrovandi). This interdisciplinary volume
aims to address these multiple connections between emblematics and
Natural History in the broader perspective of their underlying
ideologies - scientific, artistic, literary, political and/or
religious. Contributors: Alison Saunders, Anne Rolet, Marisa Bass,
Bernhard Schirg, Maren Biederbick, Sabine Kalff, Christian Peters,
Frederik Knegtel, Agnes Kusler, Aline Smeesters, Astrid Zenker,
Tobias Bulang, Sonja Schreiner, Paul Smith, and Karl Enenkel.
An examination of the disoriented subject of modernity: a dissolute
figure who makes an makes an object of its absence; from Baudelaire
to Broodthaers. In Liquidation World, Alexi Kukuljevic examines a
distinctive form of subjectivity animating the avant-garde: that of
the darkly humorous and utterly disoriented subject of modernity, a
dissolute figure that makes an art of its own vacancy, an object of
its absence. Shorn of the truly rotten illusion that the world is a
fulfilling and meaningful place, these subjects identify themselves
by a paradoxical disidentification-through the objects that take
their places. They have mastered the art of living absently, of
making something with nothing. Traversing their own morbid
obsessions, they substitute the nonsensical for sense, the
ridiculous for the meaningful. Kukuljevic analyzes a series of
artistic practices that illuminate this subjectivity, ranging from
Marcel Duchamp's Three Standard Stoppages to Charles Baudelaire's
melancholia. He considers the paradox of Duchamp's apparatus in the
Stoppages and the strange comedy of Marcel Broodthaers's relation
to the readymade; the comic subject in Jacques Vache and the
ridiculous subject in Alfred Jarry; the nihilist in Paul Valery's
Monsieur Teste; Oswald Wiener's interpretation of the dandy; and
Charles Baudelaire as a happy melancholic. Along the way, he also
touches on the work of Thomas Bernhard, Andy Kaufman, Buster
Keaton, and others. Finally, he offers an extended analysis of
Danny's escape from his demented father in Stanley Kubrick's The
Shining. Each of these subjects is, in Freud's terms, sick-sick in
the specific sense that they assume the absence of meaning and the
liquidation of value in the world. They concern themselves with
art, without assuming its value or meaning. Utterly debased,
fundamentally disoriented, they take the void as their medium.
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