|
|
Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > From 1900 > Art styles, 1960 - > General
Structured around sexual desire as the central analytical category,
this monograph systematically approaches a heterogeneous array of
artworks to purposefully examine the entanglements of art, feminist
theory, gender, and sexuality. This book considers the potential of
sexually explicit art to challenge a socially constructed
conception of sexuality as well as gender, and explores the
sexually explicit as a means to (re-)claim agency for marginalized
subjectivities and to emancipate desire from within the patriarchal
and heteronormative system. In distinct case studies, the author
focuses on works by four US-American artists - Robert Mapplethorpe,
Joan Semmel, Betty Tompkins, and Tee A. Corinne - and situates them
in relation to contemporaneous debates associated with the
insurgent Sexual Liberation Movements of the 1970s. The book will
be of interest to scholars working in art history, visual culture,
and gender and sexuality studies.
Sarah Lowndes looks back at the rise of the Glasgow art scene
through the decades, from community art to Thatcher, New Wave to
Teenage Fanclub. Charting the emergence of performance and
conceptual-related art, she looks at the background from which the
art of the last 40 years emerged, the social atmosphere which was
able to influence artists, musicians and writers who would go on to
be known worldwide.
Twenty-five leading artist duos and collectives give insight into
how and why to work collaboratively Art history is traditionally
presented as the individual's struggle for self-expression, yet
over the past fifty years, the number of artists working
collaboratively has grown exponentially. Co-Art: Artists on
Creative Collaboration explores this phenomenon through
conversations with twenty-five leading art-world pairs and groups,
who offer insight that is relevant beyond the art world, making
this book vital for all who seek to work creatively and effectively
with others. Artists featured: Allora & Calzadilla, Assemble,
Auguste Orts, ayr, Biggs & Collings, Broomberg & Chanarin,
ChimPom, Claire Fontaine, DAS INSTITUT, DIS, Elmgreen &
Dragset, Eva & Franco Mattes, GCC, Gelitin, Guerrilla Girls,
Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard, Jane and Louise Wilson, John Wood
and Paul Harrison, LaBeouf, Roenkkoe & Turner, Lizzie
Fitch/Ryan Trecartin, Los Carpinteros, Pauline Boudry/Renate
Lorenz, Raqs Media Collective, SUPERFLEX
This book is a tribute to Dublin, an impressive artistic collection
taking the reader on a tour through this most vibrant city. From
historic Trinity College and the iconic Ha'penny Bridge to the
lively pub scene and secret hidden corners, Dublin's artists
highlight its beauties in the most unique way.
On the 70th anniversary of the State of Israel, Israeli artist
Beverly Barkat (born 1966) presents her site-specific work, After
the Tribes, at the Museo Boncompagni Ludovisi in Rome. The work is
made up of a four-meter-high metal tower divided into twelve
painted panels that represent the twelve tribes of Israel.
Create interesting and expressive manga characters by learning the
techniques of professional artists. This volume builds on the
proven three-step technique presented in the companion volume,
Drawing Basic Characters. 1. Trace a simple outline of the
character 2. Add clothing, facial expressions and other details
using the easy-to-follow tips 3. Use color and pen to create the
finished character Experienced manga artists Junka Morozumi and
Tomomi Mizuna are your guides to the dazzling world of lifelike and
expressive manga characters who literally leap off the page.
Through expert tips and richly-illustrated, step-by-step tutorials,
they help you to build your skills and confidence at the same time.
Their focus is on creating a dynamic body pose and face for each
character and illustration. First you are shown how to sketch a
well-proportioned outline, then how to fill in supporting
details--powerful dramatic expressions, clothing and actions. Bold
examples portray an array of body types and faces, each capturing a
different mood or action sequence. Whether your character has just
won a major victory and is leaping into the air in triumph, or you
want to draw the subtlety of a forlorn expression, this book will
allow you to capture it. No matter what story you're telling,
Drawing Dynamic Manga Characters shows you how the pros do it.
How is home-grown contemporary art viewed within the Middle East?
And is it understood differently outside the region? What is liable
to be lost when contemporary art from the Middle East is
'transferred' to international contexts - and how can it be
reclaimed? This timely book tackles ongoing questions about how
'local' perspectives on contemporary art from the Middle East are
defined and how these perspectives intersect with global art
discourses. Inside, leading figures from the Middle Eastern art
world, western art historians, art theorists and museum curators
discuss the historical and cultural circumstances which have shaped
contemporary art from the Middle East, reflecting on recent
exhibitions and curatorial projects and revealing how artists have
struggled with the label of 'Middle Eastern Artist'. Chapters
reflect on the fundamental methodologies of art history and
cultural studies - considering how relevant they are when studying
contemporary art from the Middle East - and investigate the ways in
which contemporary, so-called 'global', theories impact on the
making of art in the region. Drawing on their unique expertise, the
book's contributors offer completely new perspectives on the most
recent cultural, intellectual and socio-political developments of
contemporary art from the Middle East.
Published on the occasion of renowned Belgian figurative painter
Luc Tuymans' retrospective exhibition in Hungary and Poland, this
volume circumvents the typical monograph format by focusing on the
reflections of regional writers, whose perspectives were solicited
for being less inhibited and more direct than the typical art
historian's. Contributors were granted complete freedom to comment
on a single picture, Tuymans' activity as a painter or any other
aspect of his personality. The resulting narratives, which are
accompanied by a well-considered selection of color reproductions,
share the spirit of the pictures and are quite personal and
engaging. For example, Warsaw's Agata Tuszynska writes, "The echoes
of the Holocaust that permeate my world and are my deepest
genealogy are your soil as well. We dig around in ashes and play
with smoke. I, with words, you, with images."
What was it like to grow up in a Modernist residence? Did these
radical environments shape the way that children looked at
architecture later in life? The oral history in this book paint a
uniquely intimate portrait of Modernism. The authors conducted
interviews with people, who spent their childhood in radical
Modernist domestic spaces, uncovering both serene and poignant
memories. The recollections range from the ambivalence of
philosopher Ernst Tugendhat, now 90 years old, who lived in the
famous Mies van der Rohe house in Brno (1930) to the fond
reminiscing of the youngest daughter of the Schminke family, who
still dreams of her Scharoun-designed ship-like villa in Loebau
(1933). The book offers a unique, private and often refreshing
perspective on these icons of the avant-garde.
A critical examination of the work of one of the most significant
and original sculptors and installation artists living today
Jamaican-born Nari Ward is best known for his large-scale
sculptures and installations, many of which are created from
unexpected materials collected around his urban neighborhood. His
incisive works frequently comment on issues surrounding race,
poverty, consumerism, and diasporic identity in American culture.
This book accompanies a major retrospective at the New Museum,
highlighting his work from the early 1990s - including Amazing
Grace (1993).
In this exquisite anthology, Editor in Chief Carolyn Turgeon and
the editors of Faerie Magazine welcome you into an enchanted realm
rich with myth, mystery, romance, and abundant natural beauty.
Organized into four sections-Flora and Fauna, Fashion and Beauty,
Arts and Culture, and Home, Food, and Entertaining-this gorgeous
volume offers an array of exquisite vintage4 and contemporary fine
art and photography, literature, essays, do-it-yourself projects,
and recipes that provide hours of reading, viewing, and dreaming
pleasure, along with a multitude of ideas for modern-day living and
entertaining with a distinctive fairy touch.
An expanded edition of the definitive book on Ruth Asawa's
fascinating life and her lasting contributions to American art. The
work of American artist Ruth Asawa (1926-2013) is brought into
brilliant focus in this definitive book, originally published to
accompany the first complete retrospective of Asawa's career,
organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco in 2006. This
new edition features an expanded collection of essays and a
detailed illustrated chronology that explore Asawa's fascinating
life and her lasting contributions to American art. Beginning with
her earliest works-drawings and paintings created in the 1940s
while she was studying at Black Mountain College-this beautiful
volume traces Asawa's flourishing career in San Francisco and her
trajectory as a pioneering modernist sculptor who is recognized
internationally for her innovative wire sculptures, public
commissions, and activism on behalf of public arts education.
Through her lifelong experimentations with wire, especially its
capacity to balance open and closed forms, Asawa invented a
powerful vocabulary that contributed a unique perspective to the
field of twentieth-century abstract sculpture. Working in a variety
of nontraditional media, Asawa performed a series of remarkable
metamorphoses, leading viewers into a deeper awareness of natural
forms by revealing their structural properties. Through her art,
Asawa transfigured the commonplace into metaphors for life
processes themselves. The Sculpture of Ruth Asawa establishes the
importance of Asawa's work within a larger cultural context of
artists who redefined art as a way of thinking and acting in the
world, rather than as merely a stylistic practice. This updated
edition includes a new introduction and more than fifty new images,
as well as original essays that reflect on the impact of American
political history on Asawa's artistic vision, her experience with
printmaking, and her friendship with photographer Imogen
Cunningham. Contributors include Susan Ehrens, Mary Emma Harris,
Karin Higa, Jacqueline Hoefer, Emily K. Doman Jennings, Paul J.
Karlstrom, John Kreidler, Susan Stauter, Colleen Terry, and Sally
B. Woodbridge. Published in association with the Fine Arts Museums
of San Francisco (FAMSF).
A larger-than-life figure in the design community with a client
list to match, Paula Scher turned her first major project as a
partner at Pentagram into a formative twenty-five-year relationship
with the Public Theater in New York. This behind-the-scenes account
of the relationship between Scher and "the Public," as it's
affectionately known, chronicles over two decades of brand and
identity development and an evolving creative process in a unique
"autobiography of graphic design." New Yorkers, designers, and
theater fans everywhere will be thrilled to find hundreds of
Scher's posters, including those for Hamilton, Bring in 'da Noise,
Bring in 'da Funk, and numerous Shakespeare in the Park
productions, collected in this one-of-a-kind volume along with
other printed and process-related matter. Essays by two of the
theater's artistic directors, George C. Wolfe and Oskar Eustis, and
design critics Steven Heller and Ellen Lupton contextualize Scher's
dynamic typographic treatment.
Dan Klein and Alan J. Poole began collecting in the late 1970s and
over the subsequent thirty years assembled on the most
comprehensive collections of modern British and Irish glass. The
book includes work by over one hundred makers at the very cutting
edge of their art. This dazzling collection was gifted to National
Museums Scotland in 2009.
On the trail of air, wind, and breath Wind moves - both things and
human thought. The wind is also a harbinger both of new beginnings
and of decay, of control and chaos, and the destructive force of
the wind is central to the debate on climate change. The book Wenn
der Wind weht / When the Wind Blows is being published in
conjunction with the exhibition of the same name at KUNST HAUS
WIEN, in cooperation with the University of Applied Arts Vienna. It
presents more than twenty artistic projects that render the unseen
elements air, wind, and breath visible in different ways. Ernst
Strouhal traces (cultural) stories of the wind in his text "Flying
Robert and His Kin," while curators Verena Kaspar-Eisert and Liddy
Scheffknecht look at air as a medium in contemporary art.
Publication to accompany the exhibition at KUNST HAUS WIEN
(12/03-28/08/2022) Works by Hoda Afshar, Olafur Eliasson, Ulay /
Marina Abramovic, and others With a conversation between
historian/author Philipp Blom and climate researcher Helga
Kromp-Kolb
Since its Tokyo debut in 1995, Gunther von Hagens' 'Body Worlds'
exhibition has been visited by more than 25 million people at
museums and science centers across North America, Europe, and Asia.
Preserved through von Hagens' unique process of plastination, the
bodies shown in the controversial exhibit are posed to mimic life
and art, from a striking re-creation of Rodin's ""The Thinker"" to
a preserved horse and its human rider, a basketball player, and a
reclining pregnant woman - complete with fetus in its eighth month.
This interdisciplinary volume analyzes ""Body Worlds"" from a
number of perspectives, describing the legal, ethical,
sociological, and religious concerns which seem to accompany the
exhibition as it travels the world.Section One focuses on the ways
in which von Hagens' exhibit is designed to elicit a constrained
and manipulated viewer response, investigating rhetorical
persuasion embedded in the 'Body Worlds' exhibition and literature
along with the linguistic trickery of donor consent forms. Section
Two examines the historical antecedents of 'Body Worlds', focusing
on how Victorian anatomical museums and freak shows have shaped and
informed the contemporary exhibit.Section Three describes the
exhibition's engagement with European historical contexts,
including the motif of bodily degradation and the rise of
abstractionist art. Section Four focuses on queer or gendered
readings of 'Body Worlds', while Section Five addresses concerns
about the exhibit's bio-ethical, religious, and spiritual
controversies, including arguments that it commodifies the human
body and depoliticizes the dead. The book includes photographs of
plastinated cadavers and Ron Mueck's hyper-realist sculptures,
along with several anatomical drawings and facsimiles of Victorian
anatomical museum catalogs.
This is the most comprehensive monograph to-date on the innovative
abstract site-related installations of German artist Katharina
Grosse (b.1961). Grosse's daring move from the canvas into both
architectural space and the landscape, with her signature colourful
spray paintings, has resulted in a deeply compelling body of work.
From a Toronto airport to a decrepit beach structure on the New
York coast and the spaces of major museums worldwide, Grosse's
works present thorough, yet temporary, carnivalesque
transformations of extant places and situations. Author Gregory
Volk has known Katharina Grosse and written about her work since
the very outset of her career, and has witnessed her journey from
unique talent to radical visionary. As he suggests here, Grosse's
continually developing practice, simultaneously ungainly and
exhilarating, bewildering and liberating, radically extends the
possibilities for contemporary abstract painting.
The collected works of Julius Csotonyi, one of the world's most
high profile and talented contemporary paleoartists. Csotonyi has
considerable academic expertise that contributes to his stunning
dynamic art.
Csotonyi represents the natural world photorealistically and has
been influenced by natural history illustrators such as Peter
Zallinger, Doug Henderson and Greg Paul. He uses bold patterns and
colors to paint the prehistoric world both with traditional media
as well as modern digital techniques.
The early 21st century has seen contemporary art make continued use
of audience participation, in which the spectator becomes part of
the artwork itself. In this book, Kaija Kaitavuori claims that the
`participator' is a new artistic role that does not fall under the
auspices of artist or spectator and in proving such she devises a
four-group typology of involvement. Her classification
distinguishes between different forms of engagement and identifies
their specific features. The key criteria she proposes are how
concepts of authorship and ownership shift in relation to
collectively created work, how contracts regulating the use and
production of shared work are arranged and the extent to which
involvement in making art can be regarded as democratic. This
highly original book thus offers students and teachers the tools
with which to improve their understanding of participatory art and
removes the confusing terminology that has characterized so many
other discussions.
|
|