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Pieter Hugo's images are unflinching and unforgettable. Beginning
with "Looking Aside," his series of portraits of marginalized
people, Hugo has striven to capture the African continent with
empathy and impartiality. Whether confronting the aftermath of
genocide in Rwanda, documenting electrical waste dumps in Ghana, or
photographing in Nigeria's dynamic film industry, Nollywood, Hugo
treats his subjects with reverence and awe. Including examples of
his most recent series taken in the U.S. and China, this book
offers stunning reproductions of Hugo's work in color and
black-and-white, accompanied by the photographer's personal
commentary. Bringing together more than a decade of work that has
elicited fulsome praise, this volume lets readers appreciate Pieter
Hugo's extraordinary oeuvre.
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Jeppe Hein - This Way (Hardcover)
Lisa Grolig, Peter Høeg, Finn Janning, Hartmut Rosa, Uta Ruhkamp
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R1,602
R1,326
Discovery Miles 13 260
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Which way do I go? We consciously and unconsciously travel numerous
distances every day—not only shorter and longer distances, but
inner ones as well. Both the works and the staging by the Danish
artist Jeppe Hein (*1974) at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg address this
theme. In a labyrinth of spaces, paths, intersections, and squares,
visitors not only encounter the minimalistally, kinetically, and
socially oriented works by Hein but are also surprised by new and
site-specific works. After his burnout in December 2009, he
expanded his spectrum of material: sound, resonance, silence,
scents, or breath characterize his new works and reflect his
examination of Eastern philosophies and practices such as Buddhism,
yoga, and meditation. The catalogue is also as personal as his
watercolor journal in the exhibition. Jeppe Hein becomes palpable
as both an artist and a person in a very open conversation with the
curator Uta Ruhkamp as well as in essays by Finn Janning and Peter
Høeg. (German edition ISBN 978-3-7757-4084-5)Exhibition:
Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg 15.11.2015–13.3.2016
Robin Rhode's trademark is the wall. His works are influenced by
urban music culture, film, popular sports, youth culture, and
traditional South African storytelling. They are created in the
public space, on walls. It's not about the statement that he leaves
behind on the street, though-it's about the pro-cess. Hence, in his
visual short stories he captures the links between drawing,
performance, and sculpture, step by step. No body without a line,
no line without a body. With drawing as his starting point, he
develops increasingly complex photo-graphic works, digital
animations, performances, sculptures, and works on paper, which
comprise a content-related balanc-ing act between South African
history, culture, mindset, signs, and codes and the abstract
language of European-Ameri-can art history. This richly illustrated
catalogue accompanies Rhode's first solo show in twelve years in
Germany. Besides pictures of the art itself, the book also contains
an interview, an introductory essay, and poems by South African
authors, to which his work often refers.
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