|
Showing 1 - 16 of
16 matches in All Departments
Uninterrupted Fugue offers a selection of critical essays about the
art of Palestinian artist Kamal Boullata, covering 40 years of his
career. Written by an international constellation of critics, art
historians and museum curators coming together for the first time
in one book, they reveal a wide range of analytical perspectives on
the unfolding of abstract art in exile. Readers interested in
contemporary art beyond the Western canon, will find in this
lavishly illustrated book rare insights into an aesthetic where
frontiers are crossed between verbal and visual expression, between
modernity and traditions rooted in Byzantine and Islamic art.
Explores cities of exile from different perspectives and presents
different methods and sources for exile and urban studies. The
essays are written by internationally recognized scholars, and
contain a wide range of themes including mapping, oral history,
queerness, photography. This book will make a significant
contribution to the theory and methodology of research on
historical exile, cities and modernities, as well as present
multidisciplinary exile research from an urban perspective. With a
blend of case studies, and theoretical approaches, it interweaves
histories of modernism and exile in different urban environments
and focuses on historical dislocations in the first half of the
twentieth century, when artistic and urban movements constituted
themselves in global exchange. Although this book takes a
historical perspective, it is written with an awareness of current
flight movements and will make a significant contribution to the
theory and methodology of research on exile. The knowledge of
previous historical exile experiences is important for the
understanding of contemporary flight movements: after all, these
are not singular phenomena. For migration movements in the first
half of the 20th century and for those of today, it is equally
possible to speak of urban centres of attraction for refugees:
Today, Berlin is a European metropolis of exile; in the 1930s and
1940s, Paris, Prague, London, New York, Istanbul and Shanghai were
destinations for refugees. With contributions from Maddalena Alvi,
Ekaterina Aygün, Claudia Cendales Paredes, Julia Eichenberg,
Margit Franz, Nils Grosch, Mareike Hetschold, Louis Kaplan, Laura
Karp Lugo, Katya Knyazeva, Merve Köksal, Rachel Lee, Chris
McConville, Anna Messner, Alexis Nuselovici, Robert Pascoe,
Valentina Pino Reyes, Helene Roth, Valeria Sánchez Michel, Marine
Schütz, Seza Sinanlar Uslu, Felicitas Söhner, Mareike Schwarz,
Marina Sorokina, Xin Tong, Diana Wechsler, Jessica Williams Stark
and Federico Vitelli.
Der Band prasentiert einen Querschnitt einer jungen,
gegenwartsbezogenen Turkeiforschung. Im Zentrum steht dabei die
Spannung zwischen repressiver Staatsideologie und kultureller und
gesellschaftlicher Vielfalt, zwischen der Verfestigung autoritarer,
neopatrimonialer Strukturen wahrend der Regierungszeit der AKP
unter Tayyip Erdogan und vielfaltigen Formen des Widerstands. Viele
der Beitrage reagieren direkt oder indirekt auf die gewaltsame
Niederschlagung der Gezi-Proteste im Juni 2013 und beleuchten aus
einer interdisziplinaren Perspektive das Scheitern des neoliberalen
Arrangements sowie die vehement gefuhrten Auseinandersetzungen um
Geschlechterrollen und ethnische und religioese Identitaten.
Explores cities of exile from different perspectives and presents
different methods and sources for exile and urban studies. The
essays are written by internationally recognized scholars, and
contain a wide range of themes including mapping, oral history,
queerness, photography. This book will make a significant
contribution to the theory and methodology of research on
historical exile, cities and modernities, as well as present
multidisciplinary exile research from an urban perspective. With a
blend of case studies, and theoretical approaches, it interweaves
histories of modernism and exile in different urban environments
and focuses on historical dislocations in the first half of the
twentieth century, when artistic and urban movements constituted
themselves in global exchange. Although this book takes a
historical perspective, it is written with an awareness of current
flight movements and will make a significant contribution to the
theory and methodology of research on exile. The knowledge of
previous historical exile experiences is important for the
understanding of contemporary flight movements: after all, these
are not singular phenomena. For migration movements in the first
half of the 20th century and for those of today, it is equally
possible to speak of urban centres of attraction for refugees:
Today, Berlin is a European metropolis of exile; in the 1930s and
1940s, Paris, Prague, London, New York, Istanbul and Shanghai were
destinations for refugees. With contributions from Maddalena Alvi,
Ekaterina Aygün, Claudia Cendales Paredes, Julia Eichenberg,
Margit Franz, Nils Grosch, Mareike Hetschold, Louis Kaplan, Laura
Karp Lugo, Katya Knyazeva, Merve Köksal, Rachel Lee, Chris
McConville, Anna Messner, Alexis Nuselovici, Robert Pascoe,
Valentina Pino Reyes, Helene Roth, Valeria Sánchez Michel, Marine
Schütz, Seza Sinanlar Uslu, Felicitas Söhner, Mareike Schwarz,
Marina Sorokina, Xin Tong, Diana Wechsler, Jessica Williams Stark
and Federico Vitelli.
Design Dispersed pursues the complex and heterogeneous connections
between migration and design in the 20th and 21st centuries. The
edited volume gathers contributions by international researchers
and curators on the question of how design practices and
(historical) objects articulate, respond to and critically reflect
on migration, flight and displacement: Besides a collage which
highlights the aesthetic effects resulting from the networking,
overlapping and mixing of forms, another strand of the book looks
at the political and social dimensions of design. How are design
objects material modes of a critical inquiry on movements of people
and things? What role do object trajectories play in the emigre
movements of the 1930s and 1940s? Other texts follow the question
of how migrants and refugees form their experience and political
fight for acceptance into design and architectural productions. A
final essay contributes to wordings and projections - what
vocabulary do we need in order to adequately think and write about
a design dispersed?
How can we think of art history as a discipline that moves
process-based, performative, and cultural migratory movement to the
center of its theoretical and methodical analyses? With
contributions from internationally renowned experts, this manual,
for the first time, provides answers as to what consequences the
interaction of migration and globalization has on research in the
field of the science of art, on curatory practice, and on artistic
production and theory. The objective of this multi-vocal anthology
is to open up an interdisciplinary discourse surrounding the
increased focus on the phenomenon of migration in art history.
Text in English & German. When architects design a house for
themselves, the often tense relationship between clients and
builders is usually absent. That is why in many such buildings the
architect-designers artistic stance and political position,
preferences and antipathies, temperament and character are more
pronounced than usual. Moreover the architectural theories, debates
and trends of an epoch also leave their traces in them in a
particular way. We encounter both attachment to tradition and
commitment to the avant-garde, willingness to experiment and
pragmatism, distinctive artistry and views shaped by the fact that
a building is also a product of engineering. And last but not
least, expressed in their houses are the personal life
circumstances of the people concerned, or the messages the houses
are meant to convey above and beyond their actual purpose: as a
'manifesto', as the 'self-portrait' of the architect, but also as
an advertising tool or as a sign of connection to specific milieux
or positions. Building for oneself has a special connotation under
the conditionsof migration and exile. Among the most prominent
examples are the private homes of Rudolph Schindler in West
Hollywood (1921/22), Richard Neutra in Los Angeles (1932), Walter
Gropius in Lincoln, Massachusetts (1937/1938), Ernst May near
Nairobi (1937/1938), Bruno Taut in Istanbul (1937/1938), Ernoe
Goldfinger in London (19371939), Marcel Breuer in New Canaan,
Connecticut (1938/1939 and 1947/1948), Josep Lluis Sert in
Lattingtown, New York (19471950) and Max Cetto in Mexiko-Stadt
(1948/1949). What expression could voluntary migration or forced
change of location find in these buildings? To what extent do the
architects other buildings differ from such 'homes of ones own' in
a foreign country, to use an expression borrowed and modified from
Virginia Woolf? The book is a collection of contributions by
internationally renowned authors and examines not only the
buildings themselves but also other aspects of the topic that have
hitherto received little attention.
|
Exil im Krieg 19391945 (German, Paperback)
Reinhard Andress, Hans Rudolf Vaget; Edited by (consulting) Wolfgang Rainer LA"cke; Contributions by Burcu Dogramaci, Florian Traussnig, …
|
R1,165
Discovery Miles 11 650
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
|