|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
This book is an intensive reconsideration of the very first
site-specific installation staged in India. Vivan Sundaram, one of
India's most innovative artists, located his History Project,
marking fifty years of Indian independence, in a hugely visited and
popular public institution, the Victoria Memorial and Museum in
Kolkata. The artist's choice of setting was by way of a challenge:
to 'occupy' an imperial edifice and change its orientation; to
reflect India's struggle for independence and the emerging nation's
stake in modernity through an anachronistic mirror; and to engage
with postcolonial contradictions through recursive narration. It
needed an artwork scaled to the proportion of these issues and the
book examines how Sundaram met this challenge. His ideology and
aesthetic, his formal choices and method, are critically
investigated in a series of essays contributed by distinguished
authors: cultural theorists, art and architectural historians. The
book carries abundant, well-annotated illustrations of the complex
installation.
The mapping of the history and trajectory of Indian modern art is a
project begun only in recent years and included in it is the
recovery of lesser known names and moments from under the shadow of
a few dominant ones. Within it, its conscience keeper-art
criticism-has borne greater neglect and obscurity. One such voice,
heard with considerable attention in its time, was that of the
Delhi-based art critic K. B. Goel (1930-2018). Active from the late
1950s to the '90s, his career broadly coincided with the modernist
period. Active mainly as a reviewer, Goel also wrote lengthy
reflective assessments, and his art writings stand out for an
interpretative and often theory-based approach that is quite unique
to Indian art criticism. Writing on some of the most definitive
artists, movements, and styles of twentieth-century Indian art, he
bears the distinction of successfully transitioning from his
modernist training to theorize on the earliest postmodern
developments in Indian art, such as installation art. This
annotated volume seeks to bring together Goel's major writings,
accompanied by a critical introduction that draws attention to his
frameworks, concerns, and methodologies. It has a foreword by the
eminent art critic Geeta Kapur.
The Swami Vivekananda's speech to the World's Parliament of
Religions in Chicago in 1893 is the centerpiece of Indian artist
Jitish Kallat's new work, Public Notice 3. The installation went on
view at the Art Institute of Chicago on September 11, 2010, exactly
108 years after Vivekananda delivered his groundbreaking address
calling for an end to "bigotry and fanaticism." The text of the
speech appears on the risers of the Art Institute of Chicago's
Grand Staircase where it is illuminated in the five colors-red,
orange, yellow, blue, and green-designated by the United States
Homeland Security Advisory System to signify threat levels. This
companion book, which documents the installation, is the first
full-scale exploration of Kallat's work published by a North
American institution. Along with an interview with the artist,
essays contextualize Public Notice 3 within the space of the
installation and evaluate Kallat's oeuvre within an international
context. Distributed for the Art Institute of Chicago Exhibition
Schedule: The Art Institute of Chicago (09/11/10-09/11/11)
|
You may like...
Cold Pursuit
Liam Neeson, Laura Dern
Blu-ray disc
R39
Discovery Miles 390
|