|
Showing 1 - 19 of
19 matches in All Departments
|
Diego Perrone: Perrone Works (Hardcover)
Diego Perrone; Edited by Luca Cerizza; Text written by Barbara Casavecchia, Dieter Roelstraete
|
R966
R821
Discovery Miles 8 210
Save R145 (15%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
A comprehensive overview of the oeuvre of Belgian painter Jan Van
Imschoot A comprehensive overview of the oeuvre of Belgian painter
Jan Van Imschoot (b. 1963), whose contemporary work builds bridges
to predecessors such as Caravaggio, Tintoretto, Goya, and Manet.
Van Imschoot's painting consciously opts for a clear, sometimes
contradictory and ironic style. The directness of his decisive
brushwork and his balanced yet audacious use of color is strikingly
contemporary, while his work draws on historical themes from
literature and art history. In this way, Van Imschoot engages in a
continuous dialogue with the past, in which he, with a dose of
cynicism, often targets phenomena or figures that find themselves
on the fringes of (contemporary) society. Bringing together more
than 220 works by Van Imschoot with five accompanying texts, this
book gives fresh insight into the painting practice of this Belgian
master. Distributed for Mercatorfonds
|
Simon Starling (Paperback, New)
Janet Harbord; Contributions by Francesco Manacorda; Dieter Roelstraete
|
R920
R735
Discovery Miles 7 350
Save R185 (20%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
When Marcel Duchamp shipped Constantin Brancusi's sculpture Bird in
Space to Edward Steichen in 1926, New York customs officials
refused to accept that it was a work of art, instead levying the
standard import tariff for a manufactured object. A legal battle
ensued, with the courts eventually declaring Bird in Space an
artwork and therefore exempt from the tariff. Seventy-eight years
later, visitors to Simon Starling's exhibition at New York's Casey
Kaplan Gallery were confronted with Staling's own Bird in Space
(2004): a two-ton slab of steel from Romania (Brancusi's country of
origin) leaning against the gallery wall and propped up on three
inflatable cushions. The United States had recently introduced a
new import tax of twenty per cent on foreign metals, which Starling
circumvented by labelling this unaltered chunk of European steel a
work of art. Its plinth of cushioned air not only introduced a
second, more representational valance to the work but also brought
to bear the traditional sculptural parameters of weight, gravity
and balance. Starling's art frequently traffics in deception. It
also traffics in traffic, meaning the circulation of goods,
knowledge and people (usually the artist himself). Many of his
works circle back on themselves, taking an idea on a journey that
ends at its point of origin. Wilhelm Noack oHG (2006), for example,
is an elaborate helical steel structure designed to loop a
thirty-five-millimetre film of the workshop in which it was
fabricated. The circuitous path that the film takes through the
towering metal structure is the perfect visual metaphor for the
work's own circular logic, a self-regulating system that adds up to
much more than the sum of its parts. Starling is a key figure in
one of contemporary art's most significant recent developments: the
linking of artistic practice and knowledge production. Although
this tendency flourished with Conceptual art in the 1960s and
1970s, in recent years it has taken on a new intensity. Unlike the
Conceptual artists, however, many of whom strove for a
language-based dematerialized art, for Starling the object is
always at the work's heart. Economies, ecologies, coincidences and
convergences are all simply means to an end - although 'simply' may
be the wrong word to describe the transformation of thousands of
miles of travel and hundreds of years of history into a single
sculpture, film or photograph. Starling's other predecessors are
the Land artists, such as Robert Smithson, with whom he shares a
fascination with entropy and other natural forces. But he is truly
an artist of the current age, setting out to understand and
illustrate the complex processes through which the natural and
human-made realms interact. The five platinum/palladium prints that
constitute One Ton (2005) show a single view of a South African
platinum mine. Together the five prints contain the precise amount
of platinum salts that can be derived from one ton of ore,
succinctly illustrating the enormous amount of energy required in
the extraction of precious metals. Born in England in 1967 and now
living in Denmark, Starling has been the subject of solo
exhibitions at museums around the world, including the Hiroshima
City Museum of Art (2011), Kunstmuseum Basel (2005) and the Museum
of Contemporary Art in Sydney (2002), and his work has been
featured in major international group shows, such as the Venice
Biennale (2009), the Moscow Biennial (2007) and the Sao Paulo
Biennial (2005). Awards include the Turner Prize (2005), the Blinky
Palermo Prize (1999) and the Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award for
Artists (1999). In the Survey, Dieter Roelstraete presents a
comprehensive overview of Starling's work, examining circularity
and serendipity and the their relationship to historical research.
For the Interview, Francesco Manacorda and the artist discuss the
central role of time in his work. Janet Harbord's Focus scrutinizes
Wilhelm Noack oHG (2006) as an example of material cinema. Artist's
Choice is a extract from Flann O'Brien's 1996 novel The Third
Policeman, a fantastical conversation about bicycles swapping atoms
with their riders. Artists Writings include five project
statements, all of which consist, in varying proportions, of
history, science and speculative fiction.
The Other Transatlantic is attuned to the brief but historically
significant moment in the postwar period between 1950 and 1970 when
the trajectories of the Central and Eastern European art scenes on
the one hand, and their Latin American counterparts on the other,
converged in a shared enthusiasm for Kinetic and Op Art. As the
axis connecting the established power centers of Paris, London, and
New York became increasingly dominated by monolithic trends
including Pop, minimalism, and conceptualism another web of ideas
was being spun linking the hubs of Warsaw, Budapest, Zagreb, Buenos
Aires, Caracas, and Sao Paulo. These artistic practices were
dedicated to what appeared to be an entirely different set of
aesthetic concerns: philosophies of art and culture dominated by
notions of progress and science, the machine and engineering,
construction and perception. This book presents a highly
illustrated introduction to this significant transnational
phenomenon in the visual arts.
|
Rick Lowe
Dieter Roelstraete, Abigail Winograd, Allison Glenn, Fani Paraforou, Valerie Cassel Oliver, …
|
R2,364
Discovery Miles 23 640
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
This long-awaited volume celebrates the work of Kerry James
Marshall, one of America's greatest living painters. Born before
the passage of the Civil Rights Act, in Birmingham, Alabama, and
witness to the Watts riots in 1965, Marshall has long been an
inspired and imaginative chronicler of the African American
experience. Best known for large-scale interiors, landscapes, and
portraits featuring powerful black figures, Marshall explores
narratives of African American history from slave ships to the
present and draws upon his deep knowledge of art history from the
Renaissance to twentieth-century abstraction, as well as other
sources such as the comic book and the muralist tradition. With
luscious color and brushstrokes and highly detailed patterning, his
direct and intimate scenes of black middle-class life conjure a
wide range of emotions, resulting in powerful paintings that
confront the position of African Americans throughout American
history. Richly illustrated, this monumental book features essays
by noted curators as well as the artist, and more than 100
paintings from throughout the artist's career arranged thematically
by subject: history painting; beauty, as expressed through the
nude, portraiture, and self-portraiture; landscape; religion; and
the politics of black nationalism.
A leading figure of photorealist painting, Franz Gertsch (born
1930, Switzerland) has created monumental portraits of charismatic
youths and meditative depictions of nature in vivid and pains-
taking detail for over fifty years. Polyfocal Allover surveys
Gertsch's paintings from 1970 to 1982 and woodcut prints from 1979
to 2019, reflecting a vision in which all that lies within the
frame is accorded equal value. The essays, interviews, and
conversations in this publication bring further definition to the
lives and landscapes Gertsch renders with such virtuosic, eerie
precision.
Charles Le Brun's drawing manual on human emotions has been used
for centuries by artists and students as a model for depicting
facial expressions. In David Schutter's work, Le Brun's manual is
set to a different direction--a series of abstract drawings
recalling vestiges of the human face animated by emotion. But
Schutter's drawings are neither copies nor portraiture. Rather,
they are reflections on how Lebrun's renderings were made.
Collected here, Schutter's work recreates not the subject matter
but the very values of Lebrun's drawings--light, gesture, scale,
and handling of materials. The cross-hatching in the original was
used to make classical tone and volume, in Schutter's hand the
technique makes for unstable impressions of strained neck and
deeply furrowed brow, or for drawing marks and scribbles unto
themselves. As such, these drawings end up denying a neat
closure--unlike their academic source material--and render
unsettling states of mind that require repeated viewing.
Accompanied by essays from art critic Barry Schwabsky and Neubauer
Collegium curator Dieter Roelstraete, The Escape will appeal to
students, critics, and admirers of seventeenth-century, modern, and
contemporary art alike.
|
Fredrik Vaerslev - As I Imagine Him (Paperback)
Fredrik Vaerslev; Text written by Peter J. Amdam, Martha Kirszenbaum, Gunnar B. Kvaran, Therese Moellenhoff, …
|
R596
R510
Discovery Miles 5 100
Save R86 (14%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
Catrin Huber (*1968) works with architectural, fictional and
imagined spaces as well as with site-responsive practices.
Fascinated by ancient Roman wall painting, she developed
site-specific installations in a topical dialogue with two Roman
houses at the world-heritage sites of Herculaneum and Pompeii. This
intricately designed book presents Huber's versatile spatial
interventions, discusses the complex relation between her
installations and their respective archaeological settings
(local/temporal), and re-evaluates the daring concept of a
historiographic turn within the arts. Text in English, German and
Italian.
Drawing on draftsmanship, painting, literature, and installations,
Michael Tedja's oeuvre erupts into a flamboyant and visually
playful whole. His boisterous storms of imagery recall the CoBrA
movement of artists from Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam briefly
banded together after World War II. Aiming to banish bourgeois
rituals as well as theorizing around avant-garde art, they embraced
expressionist spontaneity, an unrestrained use of vivid colors,
folkloric elements, handwriting and graffiti. But Michael Tedja has
taken out the folkloric and anti-intellectual, his painting is a
kind of IQ test. With abstract and figurative visual vocabulary
complementing each other, Tedja's imagery is expressive and
linguistic, full of references and autobiographical elements. This
monograph encompasses large-scale paintings, his overwhelming
installation of large drawings Hypersubjective, as well as The
Color Guide Series. Here, Tedja deploys textured paint, crayon and
chalk on commercial paper stock-the color bars printed along the
paper's edge are left exposed-turning mass-produced standard into
something decidedly unique. Yet by constantly recycling and
repurposing images, Tedja explores the alterability of meaning
within the visual context of globalization.
Contemporary art is often obsessed with the new, but it has
recently begun to turn to projects centering on research and
delving into archives, all in the name of seeking and questioning
historical truth. From filmmakers to sculptors to conceptualists,
artists of all stripes are digging into the rubble of the past. In
this catalog that accompanies an exhibition at the Museum of
Contemporary Art Chicago in the fall of 2013, Dieter Roelstraete
gathers a diverse range of international artists to explore the
theme of melding archival and experiential modes of storytelling -
what he calls "the archaeological imaginary" - particularly in the
wake of 9/11. The Way of the Shovel offers a well-constructed
balance among excursions into the situation of contemporary art,
broad philosophical arguments around the subjects of history and
the archive, and cultural analysis. Roelstraete's opening essay
maps the critical terrain, while Ian Alden Russell explores the
roots of archaeology and its manifestations in twentieth-century
art, Bill Brown examines artistic practices that involve historical
artifacts and archival material, Sophie Berrebi offers a critique
of the "document" as seen in art after the 1960s, and Diedrich
Diederichsen writes on the monumentalization of history in European
art. The book features work by both established and young artists,
and thoughtful entries by Roelstraete accompany the exhibition
catalog, along with statements from artists Moyra Davey, Rebecca
Keller, Joachim Koester, Hito Steyerl, and Zin Taylor. The first
exhibition to showcase this innovative approach to some of the most
intriguing art of the past decade, The Way of the Shovel is
indispensable for anyone seeking to understand the forces driving
contemporary art.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|