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The first monograph on the influential contemporary
Cuban–American interdisciplinary artist and writer Coco Fusco.
Tomorrow, I will become an island is the first in-depth study of
the performances, videos and social practice of the influential
Cuban–American artist Coco Fusco. Featuring contributions by
renowned scholars of art history, performance art and Cuban
cultural politics as well as an essay by the artist herself, the
book offers a comprehensive review of Fusco’s interdisciplinary
art practice and her transnational perspective on race, gender and
power. For more than three decades, Fusco has been a leader in
conversations around the intersection of identity, feminism,
culture, and politics in the Americas and beyond. Emerging during
the 1980s as a pioneering advocate of multiculturalism in the arts,
Fusco utilizes performance, video, exhibition making, archival
research and writing to reflect upon the ways that intercultural
relations and colonial histories shape the construction of the self
and perceptions of cultural difference. Her work has critically
examined society from a postcolonial perspective, engaging with
debates about cultural politics throughout the Americas, Europe and
elsewhere. This expansive approach is highlighted through a broad
range of works that address themes including post-revolutionary
Cuba, racial stereotypes, feminist politics, animal psychology,
ethnographic displays, suppressed colonial records, military
interrogation and sex tourism. The book will accompany an
international touring retrospective of the artist’s work starting
in 2023.
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Wendy Red Star: Delegation (Hardcover)
Wendy Red Star; Contributions by Jordan Amirkhani, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Josh T Franco, Annika K Johnson, …
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R1,228
Discovery Miles 12 280
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Delegation is the first comprehensive monograph by Apsaalooke/Crow
artist Wendy Red Star, whose photography recasts historical
narratives with wit, candor, and a feminist, Indigenous
perspective. Red Star centers Native American life and material
culture through imaginative self-portraiture, vivid collages,
archival interventions, and site-specific installations. Whether
referencing nineteenth-century Crow leaders or 1980s pulp fiction,
museum collections or family pictures, she constantly questions the
role of the photographer in shaping Indigenous representation.
Including a dynamic array of Red Star's lens-based works from 2006
to the present, and a range of essays, stories, and poems,
Delegation is a spirited testament to an influential artist's
singular vision. Copublished by Aperture and Documentary Arts
Positioning Alice Neel as a champion of civil rights, this book
explores how her paintings convey her humanist politics and capture
the humanity, strength, and vulnerability of her subjects
“One of the most ambitious and thorough collections of Neel’s
work to date.”—Allison Schaller, Vanity Fair “For me,
people come first,” Alice Neel (1900–1984) declared in 1950.
“I have tried to assert the dignity and eternal importance of the
human being.” This ambitious publication surveys Neel’s nearly
70-year career through the lens of her radical humanism. Remarkable
portraits of victims of the Great Depression, fellow residents of
Spanish Harlem, leaders of political organizations, queer artists,
visibly pregnant women, and members of New York’s global diaspora
reveal that Neel viewed humanism as both a political and
philosophical ideal. In addition to these paintings of famous and
unknown sitters, the more than 100 works highlighted include
Neel’s emotionally charged cityscapes and still lifes as well as
the artist’s erotic pastels and watercolors. Essays tackle
Neel’s portrayal of LGBTQ subjects; her unique aesthetic
language, which merged abstraction and figuration; and her
commitment to progressive politics, civil rights, feminism, and
racial diversity. The authors also explore Neel’s highly personal
preoccupations with death, illness, and motherhood while
reasserting her place in the broader cultural history of the 20th
century. Published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Distributed by
Yale University Press Exhibition Schedule: The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York (March 22–August 1, 2021) Guggenheim,
Bilbao (September 17, 2021–January 30, 2022) de Young
Museum, San Francisco (March 12–July 10, 2022)
A groundbreaking examination of the "double" in modern and
contemporary art From ancient mythology to contemporary cinema, the
motif of the double-which repeats, duplicates, mirrors, inverts,
splits, and reenacts-has captured our imaginations, both attracting
and repelling us. The Double examines this essential concept
through the lens of art, from modernism to contemporary
practice-from the paired paintings of Henri Matisse and Arshile
Gorky, to the double line works of Piet Mondrian and Marlow Moss,
to Eva Hesse's One More Than One, Lorna Simpson's Two Necklines,
Roni Horn's Pair Objects, and Rashid Johnson's The New Negro
Escapist Social and Athletic Club (Emmett). James Meyer's survey
text explores four modes of doubling: Seeing Double through
repetition; Reversal, the inversion or mirroring of an image or
form; Dilemma, the staging of an absurd or impossible choice; and
the Divided and Doubled Self (split and shadowed selves, personae,
fraternal doubles, and pairs). Thought-provoking essays by leading
scholars Julia Bryan-Wilson, Tom Gunning, W.J.T. Mitchell, Hillel
Schwartz, Shawn Michelle Smith, and Andrew Solomon discuss a host
of topics, including the ontology and ethics of the double, the
double and psychoanalysis, double consciousness, the doppelganger
in silent cinema, and the queer double. Richly illustrated
throughout, The Double is a multifaceted exploration of an enduring
theme in art, from painting and sculpture to photography, film,
video, and performance. Published in association with the National
Gallery of Art, Washington, DC Exhibition Schedule National Gallery
of Art, Washington, DC July 10-October 31, 2022
A deep dive into the life and work of sculptor Louise Nevelson
recontextualizes her art in light of social movements, travel, and
her experiences in dance and theater Known for her
monumental wooden wall pieces and outdoor sculptures, Louise
Nevelson (1899–1988) was a towering figure in twentieth-century
American art. A more nuanced picture of Nevelson emerges in The
World Outside: Louise Nevelson at Midcentury. Discussions about
Nevelson’s early involvement with modern dance and subsequent
immersion in avant-garde theater bring new understandings of her
drawings and sculptures. A reframing of her travels to Mexico and
Guatemala in the early 1950s demonstrates, for the first time, how
colonial archaeology haunted her visual language for decades.
Other little-known facets of Nevelson’s life—her
interest in folk art, architecture, and period furniture—open up
a conversation about the artist’s approach to America’s past
material culture. A pioneering examination of Nevelson’s
printmaking experiences at Tamarind Lithography Workshop reveals
how the artist created alternative modes of viewing through
unconventional methods and materials. The book also reconsiders
Nevelson’s work in the context of the environmental movement.
Additionally, three contemporary artists relate Nevelson’s role
in their careers and lives, a local expert describes her roots and
relationship to Maine, and the artist’s granddaughter shares
thoughts on Nevelson’s spirituality. Distributed for the
Amon Carter Museum of American Art Exhibition Schedule Amon Carter
Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, TX (August 27, 2023–January
7, 2024) Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville, ME (February
6–June 9, 2024)
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Sharon Hayes (Paperback)
Julia Bryan-Wilson, Jeannine Tang, Lanka Tattersall
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R1,067
R841
Discovery Miles 8 410
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The first comprehensive publication to capture Hayes's unique blend
of performance and social engagement which has been at the
forefront of questions of feminist history, queer time, and protest
culture for over a decade American artist Sharon Hayes uses
photography, film, video, sound, performance, and text to
interrogate the intersections between the personal and collective
sphere. Her deeply affective and queer approach to history and
politics draws particular attention to the language of
twentieth-century activism as well as drama, anthropology, and
journalism. This book is the first to feature all of Hayes's most
significant projects, from the ten-hour performance My Fellow
American 1981-1988 to her Monument Lab addressing the absence of
monuments to women in Philadelphia. A professor of fine art at the
University of Pennsylvania, Hayes's work has been shown at the 2010
Whitney Biennial, Documenta 12 in Kassel, and the 55th Venice
Biennale, as well as in the most prestigious museums around the
world. Her re-examination of protest, speech, and history is one of
the most powerful reflections of the complexity and the urgency of
our times. Sharon Hayes is the latest addition to the acclaimed
Phaidon Contemporary Artists Series.
A daring reassessment of Louise Nevelson, an icon of
twentieth-century art whose innovative procedures relate to
gendered, classed, and racialized forms of making In this radical
rethinking of the art of Louise Nevelson (1899–1988), Julia
Bryan-Wilson provides a long-overdue critical account of a
signature figure in postwar sculpture. A Ukraine-born Jewish
immigrant, Nevelson persevered in the male-dominated New York art
world. Nonetheless, her careful procedures of construction—in
which she assembled found pieces of wood into elaborate structures,
usually painted black—have been little studied. Organized around
a series of key operations in Nevelson’s own process (dragging,
coloring, joining, and facing), the book comprises four slipcased,
individually bound volumes that can be read in any order. Both form
and content thus echo Nevelson’s own modular sculptures, the
gridded boxes of which the artist herself rearranged. Exploring how
Nevelson’s making relates to domesticity, racialized matter,
gendered labor, and the environment, Bryan-Wilson offers a
sustained examination of the social and political implications of
Nevelson’s art. The author also approaches Nevelson’s
sculptures from her own embodied subjectivity as a queer feminist
scholar. She forges an expansive art history that places
Nevelson’s assemblages in dialogue with a wide array of
marginalized worldmaking and underlines the artist’s proclamation
of allegiance to blackness.
Today's artists have an unprecedented level of choice with regard
to materials and methods available to them, yet the processes
involved in making artworks are rarely addressed in books or
exhibitions on art. Here, Glenn Adamson and Julia Bryan-Wilson
argue that the materials and methods used to make artworks hold the
key to artists' motivations, their attitudes to authorship,
uniqueness and the value of objects, the economic and social
contexts from which they emerge, and their approach to the
perceived opposition between materiality and conceptualism in art.
The book's introduction sets out a history of trends in artistic
production and the possible catalysts for the proliferation of
production strategies since the mid-twentieth century, followed by
nine chapters that explore different methods and media. Detailed
examples are interwoven with the discussion, including visuals that
reveal the intricacies of each technique or material and its
overall effect when presented as an artwork. Artists featured
include Ai Weiwei, Ron Arad, Chris Burden, Katharina Fritsch, Isa
Genzken, Jeff Koons, Los Carpinteros, Haroon Mirza, Takashi
Murakami, Gerhard Richter, Doris Salcedo and Santiago Sierra
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Pacita Abad (Hardcover)
Pacita Abad; Edited by Victoria Sung; Text written by Pio Abad, Nancy Lim, Matthew Villar Miranda, …
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R1,437
Discovery Miles 14 370
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Miranda July (Hardcover)
Miranda July; Introduction by Julia Bryan-Wilson
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R879
Discovery Miles 8 790
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From her early rarely seen Riot Grrrl-influenced fanzines and
performances to a career that has produced seminal films, fiction,
sculptures, public art, and even a smartphone app, Miranda July has
proven adept at articulating the poignancy and humour of the human
plight while also achieving enormous acclaim along the way. This
chronological retrospective includes July's performance and video
projects, award- winning films, digital multimedia, and written
pieces which make clear the multidimensionality of her work. The
book includes photography, stills, and archival ephemera and is
narrated by friends, collaborators, curators, assistants, and
audience members including David Byrne, Spike Jonze, Lena Dunham,
Carrie Brownstein, and Hans Ulrich Obrist, as well as July herself.
This behind-the-scenes commentary reveals an intimate perspective
on the process, struggles, and grit involved in forging one's own
path. What emerges is just how singular her voice is-from a movie
narrated by an injured cat to a performance that builds an
intentional community; from sculpture that engages the public to an
interfaith charity shop in a London department store. July may be
impossible to categorise, but the importance of her work and her
status as an essential cultural icon with wide-ranging appeal is
irrefutable.
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Cecilia Vicuña: About to Happen (Paperback)
Cecilia Vicuna; Text written by Andrea Andersson, Lucy R. Lippard, Macarena Gómez-Barris; Interview by Julia Bryan-Wilson
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R668
Discovery Miles 6 680
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Mika Rottenberg - the Production of Luck (Hardcover)
Mika Rottenberg; Introduction by Christopher Bedford; Text written by Julia Bryan-Wilson, Wayne Koestenbaum, Mika Rottenberg
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R1,492
R1,230
Discovery Miles 12 300
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This volume offers a comprehensive look at the career of Mika
Rottenberg (born 1976). Each chapter is devoted to one of the major
videos/installations for which Rottenberg has become known, with an
abundance of installation views, video stills, planning diagrams
and source materials. Additional illumination is provided through
texts by Rottenberg herself that accompany each project. The book
also includes drawing and photography, significant bodies of work
by Rottenberg not previously explored in book form. Also included
is a major new text by award-winning poet, novelist, humorist and
cultural critic Wayne Koestenbaum, as well as texts on the artist
by Rose Art Museum director Christopher Bedford, and author and
theorist Julia Bryan-Wilson. The book also contains a thorough
biography and bibliography of the artist to date, making this a
comprehensive resource on Rottenberg.
During the late 1960s and early 1970s, in response to the political
turbulence generated by the Vietnam War, an important group of
American artists and critics sought to expand the definition of
creative labor by identifying themselves as 'art workers'. In the
first book to examine this movement, Julia Bryan-Wilson shows how a
polemical redefinition of artistic labor played a central role in
minimalism, process art, feminist criticism, and conceptualism. In
her close examination of four seminal figures of the period -
American artists Carl Andre, Robert Morris, and Hans Haacke, and
art critic Lucy Lippard - Bryan-Wilson frames an engrossing new
argument around the double entendre that 'art works'. She traces
the divergent ways in which these four artists and writers rallied
around the 'art worker' identity, including participating in the
Art Workers' Coalition - a short-lived organization founded in 1969
to protest the war and agitate for artists' rights - and the New
York Art Strike. By connecting social art history and theories of
labor, this book illuminates the artworks and protest actions that
were central to this pivotal era in both American art and politics.
This is a Best Book of 2009, "Artforum Magazine".
In 1974, women in a feminist consciousness-raising group in Eugene,
Oregon, formed a mock organization called the Ladies Sewing Circle
and Terrorist Society. Emblazoning its logo onto t-shirts, the
group wryly envisioned female collective textile making as a
practice that could upend conventions, threaten state structures,
and wreak political havoc. Elaborating on this example as a
prehistory to the more recent phenomenon of "craftivism" the
politics and social practices associated with handmaking Fray
explores textiles and their role at the forefront of debates about
process, materiality, gender, and race in times of economic
upheaval. Closely examining how amateurs and fine artists in the
United States and Chile turned to sewing, braiding, knotting, and
quilting amid the rise of global manufacturing, Julia Bryan-Wilson
argues that textiles unravel the high/low divide and urges us to
think flexibly about what the politics of textiles might be. Her
case studies from the 1970s through the 1990s including the
improvised costumes of the theater troupe the Cockettes, the
braided rag rugs of US artist Harmony Hammond, the thread-based
sculptures of Chilean artist Cecilia Vicuna, the small hand-sewn
tapestries depicting Pinochet's torture, and the NAMES Project AIDS
Memorial Quilt are often taken as evidence of the inherently
progressive nature of handcrafted textiles. Fray, however, shows
that such methods are recruited to often ambivalent ends, leaving
textiles very much "in the fray" of debates about feminized labor,
protest cultures, and queer identities; the malleability of cloth
and fiber means that textiles can be activated, or stretched, in
many ideological directions. The first contemporary art history
book to discuss both fine art and amateur registers of handmaking
at such an expansive scale, Fray unveils crucial insights into how
textiles inhabit the broad space between artistic and political
poles high and low, untrained and highly skilled, conformist and
disobedient, craft and art.
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Camera Atomica (Paperback)
John O'Brian; Contributions by Julia Bryan-Wilson, Blake Fitzpatrick, Susan Schuppli, Douglas Coupland, …
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R800
R697
Discovery Miles 6 970
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Wherever there have been nuclear weapons and nuclear fission, there
have also been cameras. Camera Atomica explores the intimate
relationship between photography and nuclear events, to uncover how
the camera lens has shaped public perceptions of the atomic age and
its anxieties. Photographs have a crucial place in the
representation of the atomic age and its anxieties. Published in
collaboration with the Art Gallery of Ontario to coincide with a
major exhibition there in 2014. Camera Atomica examines narratives
beyond the "technological sublime" that dominates much nuclear
photography, suppressing representations of the human form in
favour of representations of B-52 bombers and mushroom clouds. The
book proposes that the body is the site where the social
environment interacts with the so-called "atomic road": uranium
mining and processing, radiation research, nuclear reactor
construction and operation, and weapons testing. Cameras have both
recorded and - in certain instances - provided motivation for the
production of nuclear events. Their histories and technological
development are intimately intertwined. All photographs, including
nuclear photographs, have the capability to function affectively by
working on the emotions and fascinating audiences. Through a wide
range of visual documentation, Camera Atomica raises questions such
as: what has the role of photography been in underwriting a public
image of the bomb and nuclear energy? Has the circulation of
photographic images heightened or lessened anxieties, or done both
at the same time? How should the different visual protocols of
photography be understood?
"State of Mind," the lavishly illustrated companion book to the
exhibition of the same name, investigates California's vital
contributions to Conceptual art--in particular, work that emerged
in the late 1960s among scattered groups of young artists. The
essays reveal connections between the northern and southern
California Conceptual art scenes and argue that Conceptualism's
experimental practices and an array of then-new media--performance,
site-specific installations, film and video, mail art, and artists'
publications--continue to exert an enormous influence on the
artists working today.
In this beautifully illustrated volume, published in celebration of
the Renwick Gallery's fortieth anniversary, author Nicholas Bell
highlights forty artists (all under the age of forty) actively
engaged in creating objects that are transforming contemporary
craft. 40 Under 40 investigates evolving notions of craft within
traditional media such as ceramics and metalwork, as well as in
fields as varied as sculpture, industrial design, installation art,
fashion, and sustainable manufacturing. Viewing craft's heritage as
a set of flexible tools rather than a rigid structure, Bell shows
how this exciting group of young artists has produced work that not
only breaks boundaries, but also uses an expanded conceptual
framework, establishing craft's important role in the world of
contemporary art and culture today. Distributed for the Smithsonian
American Art Museum Exhibition Schedule: Smithsonian American Art
Museum(07/20/12-02/3/13)
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Francis Alys: As Long as I'm Walking (Paperback)
Francis Alys; Edited by Nicole Schweizer; Text written by Julia Bryan-Wilson, Luis Perez Oramas, Judith Rodenbeck
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R1,103
R875
Discovery Miles 8 750
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In the heady and hallucinogenic days of the 1960s and '70s, a
diverse range of artists and creative individuals based in the
American West--from the Pacific coast to the Rocky Mountains and
the Southwest--broke the barriers between art and lifestyle and
embraced the new, hybrid sensibilities of the countercultural
movement. Often created through radically collaborative artistic
practices, such works as Paolo Soleri's earth homes, the hand-built
architecture of the Drop City and Libre communes, Yolanda Lopez's
political posters, the multisensory movement workshops of Anna and
Lawrence Halprin, and the immersive light shows and video-based
work by the Ant Farm and Optic Nerve collectives were intended to
generate new life patterns that pointed toward social and political
emancipation.
In "West of Center," Elissa Auther and Adam Lerner bring
together a prominent group of scholars to elaborate the historical
and artistic significance of these counterculture projects within
the broader narrative of postwar American art, which skews heavily
toward New York's avant-garde art scene. This west of center
countercultural movement has typically been associated with
psychedelic art, but the contributors to this book understand this
as only one dimension of the larger, artistically oriented,
socially based phenomenon. At the same time, they reveal the
disciplinary, geographic, and theoretical biases and assumptions
that have led to the dismissal of countercultural practices in the
history of art and visual culture, and they detail how this form of
cultural and political activity found its place in the West.
A companion to an exhibition originating at the Museum of
Contemporary Art Denver, this book illuminates how, in the western
United States, the counterculture's unique integration of art
practices, political action, and collaborative life activities
serves as a linchpin connecting postwar and contemporary artistic
endeavors.
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