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This intelligently argued overview is invaluable for the way in
which it reveals and makes coherent sense of the often-bewildering
diversity of styles, forms, media, techniques, and agendas that
proliferate in contemporary art. Extensively revised and expanded
since it was first published, Michael Archer s acclaimed book is
brought fully up to date in this third edition. A completely new
section maps the developments in contemporary art since 2000,
ensuring that the book remains an indispensable source of
information on the evolution of art over the past five-and-a-half
decades."
The definitive survey of Keith Tyson's thirty-year career. British
Turner Prize-winning artist Keith Tyson is known for a distinctive
and diverse body of work including drawing, painting, installation
and sculpture. Showing a wide range of influences, from mathematics
and science through to poetry and mythology, he is interested in
how art emerges from the combination of information systems and
physical processes that surround us every day. For over thirty
years, Tyson has probed, dissected, explored and questioned
reality. Not fixed to one artistic style, Tyson sets out to
challenge himself and the audience, whilst working with diverse
materials - paint, clay, metal, resin - to question our knowledge
of the world we perceive as real, and art's role in representing
it. With newly commissioned texts from an internationally diverse
array of writers, and including a previously unpublished interview
with the artist, this is the definitive survey of one of the most
restless and adventurous creators working today.
Although much attention has been paid to early modern European
travel to the New World, attention is just beginning to be paid to
the travels in the Old World, even though they speak to
contemporary concerns with categories like civilization, race, and
nation as much as, sometimes more than, the New World explorations.
This book aligns travel narratives and historical surveys of parts
of the Old World--Egypt, Mesopotamia, India, and Russia--with texts
by Shakespeare, Milton, and Dryden that contributed to English
ideas about those regions. Addressing the current interest in
Europe's relationship with its neighbors and near-neighbors in the
Old World, the author introduces the term "paracolonial" to
describe Europe's attitude toward those areas where its colonial
reach was intermittent or nonexistent.
The book begins by matching ancient and early modern accounts of
Egypt and Ethiopia with Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopatra,"
showing how antiquity's veneration of Egyptian values was tainted
in Shakespeare's time by anxieties of racial and sexual
degeneration. The next chapter, centered on Milton's "Paradise
Lost," relates degeneration to the epic cycle of imperial rise and
fall attributed to Southwest Asia and its monumental ruins by
European historians and travelers. The Elizabethan and Jacobean
fascination with Russia is the topic of the third chapter, which
argues that Herodotus' Scythia and early modern slavery were the
dual origins of the barbarous Russia glimpsed in Shakespeare's
"Love's Labour's Lost" and Milton's "Muscovia." In the process, the
author offers a novel explanation for the puzzling link between
Russia and racial "blackness" in the English Renaissance. The book
concludes with India, where degeneration, cyclic empire, and bodily
images of racial and sexual difference were combined in
geographical writings and sensationally staged in Dryden's
"Aureng-Zebe."
Tracing the overlap between Graeco-Roman geography and the
itineraries of Renaissance travelers and traders, "Old Worlds"
brings together a rich array of texts that rewrite European
traditions about a plural antiquity from an early modern English
perspective.
A revised and expanded edition of one the most popular titles in
the Contemporary Artists Series Born in Lebanon, Palestinian artist
Mona Hatoum was exiled to London, where she has lived and worked
since the mid-1970s. Through performance, video, sculpture, and
installation, she creates architectonic spaces that relate to the
body, language, and the condition of exile as well as transforming
everyday, domestic objects into things foreign, threatening, and
dangerous. Often exquisitely beautiful, Hatoum's works combine
states of emotion and longing with the formal simplicity of
Minimalism, creating powerful evocations of displacement, denial,
and otherness.
This work uncovers a culture of courtly surveillance, secrecy, and
espionage in an era generally regarded, since Foucault, as
characterised by the association of sovereignty with public
display. Examining the centrality of espionage in the careers and
works of Michel de Montaigne, Sir Philip Sidney, Christopher
Marlowe, Ben Jonson, and Sir Francis Bacon, it demonstrates the
association of surveillance with sovereignty before surveillance
became the characteristic mode of discipline in the modern,
abstract state. The author substantially revises our understanding
of the relationship between power and knowledge in the rise of the
modern state while subtly illuminating the inscription of that
relationship within Renaissance texts.
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Mona Hatoum (Paperback, New)
Michael Archer, Guy Brett, Catherine De Zegher, Edward W. Said, Piero Manzoni
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R862
R694
Discovery Miles 6 940
Save R168 (19%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Mona Hatoum creates events, videos, sculptures and installations
that relate to the body, to language and to the condition of exile.
Her most famous work Corps Etranger, first shown at the Tate
Gallery when she was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1995, takes
the viewer on a journey through the inner passages of the artist's
body. Her audience is thrown into a dimension in which anything is
possible, as in The Light at the End, which lures viewers down a
long tunnel towards a light that will literally burn them. While
her video work is often visceral and emotive, her sculptures and
environments are ultra cool and minimal in their aesthetic. They
often mimic domestic or institutional furniture, yet their designs
and materials have a threatening edge. Exquisitely beautiful,
Hatoum's works are at the same time powerful evocations of
statelessness, anxiety, denial and otherness. Since Hatoum was
exiled to London, where she has lived and worked since the 1970s,
she has exhibited her work around the world, including the Centre
Pompidou in Paris and the Venice Biennale. This book surveys all
her work, ranging from early performances, through to her videos,
objects and full-scale environments. The distinguished art critic
Guy Brett, author of Through Our Own Eyes: Popular Art and Modern
History (1986), explores key themes around a sense of place, the
body and communication that emerge from Hatoum's range of work. The
artist describes a chronology of practice in conversation with
Michael Archer, writer, curator and co-founder of London's Audio
Arts sound archive. Director of the Kanaal Art Foundation Catherine
de Zegher makes a complex and provocative analysis of Recollection,
a work she commissioned for a sixteenth-century beguinage. Hatoum
has chosen a text by the influential Palestinian author Edward Said
as well as a statement from the noted Italian post-war sculptor and
performance artist Piero Manzoni. The book also includes Hatoum's
own notes, statements and interviews.
The rules of composition have changed. Discover the new ideas that
shape the art we make today. Art has changed beyond recognition
since the principles of harmonious composition were established in
classical times. From the invention of photography to the digital
revolution, technological and social advances have transformed the
way we see the world. This new vision, influenced by changing
attitudes not least towards gender roles and the West's colonial
history, is reflected in the art we make. From the rejection of
Western compositional orthodoxy by artists such as Édouard Manet,
Vincent van Gogh and Mary Cassatt to the revolutionary practices of
Jean- Michel Basquiat, Tania Bruguera, Meleko Mokgosi and many
others, acclaimed art critic and writer Michael Archer reveals the
ideas and intentions behind a thrillingly diverse selection of
artworks, giving readers a new set of tools for understanding art
today.
An examination of a work that captures the spirit of the
1980s-commodification, seduction, and political inactivity. In Jeff
Koons's One Ball Total Equilibrium Tank (1985), a Spalding
basketball floats in the center of a glass tank that stands on a
four-legged black metal structure. It has been called one of the
defining works of the 1980s-but also described (by such critics as
Craig Owens, Rosalind Krauss, and Hal Foster) as "an endgame,"
"misleading," and "repulsive." The work presents what the artist
called "the ultimate state of being"-neither death nor life but the
absence of change. It captured a spirit of the time, characterized
by commodification, seduction, and political inactivity. Its
stillness embodied the opposite of social revolution. But the
"total equilibrium" of the work is actually temporary. For purely
physical reasons, the equilibrium is lost every six months and must
be reset. In this extended essay on Koons's famous work, Michael
Archer puts One Ball Total Equilibrium Tank in an art historical
framework, describing its initial exhibition at International With
Monument in New York and related issues of media, commercialism,
and class. He discusses the wider context of the 1980s art world,
in which a renewed attention to painting practices met the legacy
of Pop and appropriation art-setting the stage for the negative
critical reception Koons's artwork first received. Archer goes on
to consider sport as celebrity-maker and industry; the physical
science of equilibrium; and the implications of the fact that the
equilibrium of One Ball Total Equilibrium Tank is indeed total-but
temporary.
From kangaroos and koalas to the giant "Diprotodon" and bizarre
"thingodontans," prehistoric mammals evolved within the changing
and sometimes harsh environments of Australia. As part of Gondwana,
Australia was the first landmass to be isolated from the
supercontinent Pangaea. In "Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and
New Guinea, " four respected paleontologists present a history of
the development of modern mammals from the unique evolutionary
environment of Australia and New Guinea. The authors describe both
what is known about prehistoric Australian mammals and what can be
reconstructed from the fossil evidence about their appearance and
behaviors.
This accessible reference work offers facts about how each
mammal got its name and provides a description of how the fossil
mammal resembles its modern descendants. Over 200 four-color
illustrations enhance the text, which describes the age, diet, and
habitat of these extinct mammals. The authors also detail how each
mammal evolved and is now classified. Diagrams showing skeletal
features and tooth structure and a glossary of technical terms are
also included.
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