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The AIDS Crisis Is Ridiculous and Other Writings, 1986-2003 (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R1,256
Discovery Miles 12 560
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The AIDS Crisis Is Ridiculous and Other Writings, 1986-2003 (Paperback, New Ed)
Series: Writing Art
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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College Art Association's Frank Jewett Mather Award for Distinction
in Art Criticism, February 2006. The HIV epidemic animates this
collection of essays by a noted artist, writer, and activist. "So
total was the burden of illness--mine and others'--that the only
viable response, other than to cease making art entirely, was to
adjust to the gravity of the predicament by using the crisis as a
lens," writes Gregg Bordowitz, a film- and video-maker whose
best-known works, "Fast Trip Long Drop" (1993) and "Habit" (2001),
address AIDS globally and personally. In "The AIDS Crisis Is
Ridiculous"--the title essay is inspired by Charles Ludlam, founder
of the Ridiculous Theater Company--Bordowitz follows in the
tradition of artist-writers Robert Smithson and Yvonne Rainer by
making writing an integral part of an artistic practice. Bordowitz
has left his earliest writings for the most part unchanged--to
preserve, he says, "both the youthful exuberance and the palpable
sense of fear" created by the early days of the AIDS crisis. After
these early essays, the writing becomes more experimental,
sometimes mixing fiction and fact; included here is a selection of
Bordowitz's columns from the journal "Documents," "New York Was
Yesterday." Finally, in his newest essays he reformulates early
themes, and, in "My Postmodernism" (written for "Artforum"'s
fortieth anniversary issue) and "More Operative Assumptions"
(written especially for this book), he reexamines the underlying
ideas of his practice and sums up his theoretical concerns. In his
mature work, Bordowitz seeks to join the subjective--the experience
of having a disease--and the objective--the fact of the disease as
a global problem. He believesthat this conjunction is necessary for
understanding and fighting the crisis. "If it can be written," he
says, "then it can be realized."
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