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Bruno Munari was one of the most important and eclectic
twentieth-century European artists. Dubbed the "Leonardo and Peter
Pan" of contemporary art, he pioneered what would later be labelled
kinetic art, playing a key role in the constitution and definition
of the aesthetic programmes of groups such as Movimento Arte
Concreta and Programmed Art. He became an internationally
recognized name in the field of industrial design, winning the
prestigious "Compasso d'Oro" prize four times, while also being a
prominent figure in Italian graphic design, working for magazines
such as Tempo and Domus, as well as renowned publishing companies
such as Einaudi and Bompiani. He left an indelible mark as an art
pedagogue and popularizer with his famous 1970s artistic
laboratories for children and was the author of numerous books,
ranging from essays on art and design to experimental books.
Capturing a resurgent interest in Munari at the international
level, the exceptional array of critical voices in this volume
constitutes an academic study of Munari of a depth and range that
is unprecedented in any language, offering a unique analysis of
Munari's seven-decade-long career. Through original archival
research, and illuminating and generative comparisons with other
artists and movements both within and outside Italy, the essays
gathered here offer novel readings of more familiar aspects of
Munari's career while also addressing those aspects that have
received scant or no attention to date.
Michelangelo Antonioni's 1960s films are widely recognized as both
exemplars of cinema and key texts in ushering in cinema's 'modern'
incarnation. Reconnecting Antonioni's aesthetically audacious films
of the 1960s to the ferment of their historical time, Antonioni and
the Aesthetics of Impurity addresses these works' crucial, yet
overlooked, affinity with the new 'impure' art practices that
emerged in the period. At the same time, the book also offers a
novel reading of the films' dialogue with postwar pictorial
abstraction. Revealing an Antonioni who embraced both mixed and
mass media and reflected on them via his cinema, the book replaces
auteuristic accounts of the director's work with a new
understanding of its critical significance in late-twentieth
century cinema and visual culture.Matilde Nardelli teaches at the
University of West London
As the cinematic experience becomes subsumed into today's
ubiquitous technologies of seeing, contemporary artworks lift the
cinematic out of the immateriality of the film screen and separate
it into its physical components within the gallery space. How to
read these reformulations of the cinematic medium - and their
critique of what it is and has been? In Theorizing Cinema Through
Contemporary Art: Expanding Cinema, leading film theorists consider
artworks that incorporate, restage, and re-present cinema's
configuration of the key categories of space, experience,
presence/absence, production and consumption, technology, myth,
perception, event, and temporality, so interrogating the creation,
appraisal, and evolution of film theory as channeled through
contemporary art. This book takes film theory as a blueprint for
the moving image, and juxtaposes it with artworks that render
cinema as a material object. In the process, it unfolds a complex
relationship between a theory and a practice that have commonly
been seen as virtually incompatible, renewing our understanding of
each and, more to the point, their interactions.
Influential, innovative and aesthetically experimental, the films
of Michelangelo Antonioni are widely recognized as both exemplars
of cinema and key in ushering in its 'new' or 'modern' incarnation
around 1960. Antonioni and the Aesthetics of Impurity offers a
radical rethinking of the director's work. It argues against
prevalent understandings of it in terms of both cinematic purity
and indebtedness to painting. Reconnecting Antonioni's
aesthetically audacious films of the 1960s and 1970s to the ferment
of their historical time, Antonioni and the Aesthetics of Impurity
brings into relief these works' crucial, yet overlooked, affinity
with the new, 'impure', art practices - of John Cage, Franco
Vaccari, Robert Smithson, Piero Gilardi and Andy Warhol among
others - that precipitated the demotion of painting from its
privileged position as a paradigm for all the arts. Revealing an
Antonioni who embraced both mixed and mass media and reflected on
them via cinema, the book replaces auteuristic, if not
hagiographic, accounts of the director's work with a new
understanding of its critical significance across the modern visual
arts and culture more broadly.
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