Gregor Schneider

Gregor Schneider
Author :
Publisher : Steidlmack/Artangel
Total Pages : 176
Release :
ISBN-10 : UOM:39015064361655
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (55 Downloads)

Synopsis Gregor Schneider by : Gregor Schneider

Talks about artist Gregor Schneider's extension of the original work, a document and exploration of Schneider's obsession with repression, reproduction, and repetition in images and text. Internationally renowned for his unnerving presentation of normality, Schneider's medium is the room - kitchen, living room, bedroom, bathroom, and cellar.

Cubes

Cubes
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 8881585804
ISBN-13 : 9788881585809
Rating : 4/5 (04 Downloads)

Synopsis Cubes by : Gregor Schneider

This publication presents his video proposal for an unrealized work called Cube Venice 2005, which would have been a giant black cube plonked in the middle of St. Mark's Place, Venice. Along the visuals, Schneider explains that the Kaaba in Mecca inspired his cube, which would have been as tall as the buildings that describe the square of St. Mark's.

End

End
Author :
Publisher : Walther Konig
Total Pages : 202
Release :
ISBN-10 : 3865604226
ISBN-13 : 9783865604224
Rating : 4/5 (26 Downloads)

Synopsis End by : Gregor Schneider

Gregor Scheider's work is about rooms - visible and invisible, doubled and duplicated, labyrinthine rooms within rooms. Rather than following a particular principle, he observes the effects that interventions in the common logic of existing architecture have on our perception. The result is frightening, disorientating and in an uncanny way, magically fascinating. Presented here, on numerous colour plates, are two tours that are characteristic of his work. These nightmarish trips lead us through suppressed subconscious experiences, through 'black holes', familiar yet sinister spaces, oversized, walk-in sculptures with rooms that are doubled or duplicated through mirrors and doors. The perception of time and space becomes warped and the idea of the artistic original is scrutinised by this continual doubling and repetition. This book, the most comprehensive monograph on Gregor Schneider to date, was designed and photographed by the artist himself. Published on the occasion of the exhibition at Museum Abteiberg, Germany, November 2008 - July 2009. English and German text.

Gregor Schneider

Gregor Schneider
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 3954761785
ISBN-13 : 9783954761784
Rating : 4/5 (85 Downloads)

Synopsis Gregor Schneider by : Ulrich Loock

Gregor Schneider (b. Rheydt, Germany, 1969; lives in Rheydt) is an influential and controversial artist whose work critics like to misunderstand. Disavowing the art object, he thinks by constructing spaces. In the mid1980s, he sought to pinpoint the idle state of action. He altered spaces by inserting duplicates, demolishing an economic way of thinking. Over the past fifteen years, he has gradually moved toward the field of politics and the public sphere. Schneider's works cross Germany's more recent history with the nonplaces of personal existence; he stages encounters between cultural moments that are alien to one another--for example, he wanted to build a black cube in the dimensions of the Kaaba outside St. Mark's Basilica in Venice (the plan was nixed by the censors). The catalogue aims to present his art as a cohesive whole spanning three decades. More than three hundred illustrations shed light on its stations; extensive annotations by Gregor Schneider himself and the editor and curator Ulrich Loock mark interconnections as well as contradictions within the oeuvre. The book touches on works Schneider created when he was thirteen, fourteen, fifteen years old (Adolescent Discontent, 1980s) as well as the insertion of spaces into a new venue (Dead House u r, 2001) or the grinding to dust of Joseph Goebbels's birthplace (The Spirit of the Nazi Era, 2015). It offers the firstever structured overview of Schneider's oeuvre in its entirety.

The Artist's House

The Artist's House
Author :
Publisher : National Geographic Books
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783943365306
ISBN-13 : 3943365301
Rating : 4/5 (06 Downloads)

Synopsis The Artist's House by : Kirsty Bell

The artist's house is a prism through which to view not only the artistic practice of its inhabitant, but also to apprehend broader developments in sculpture and contemporary art in relation to domestic architecture and interior space. Based on a series of interviews and site visits with living artists about the role of their home in relation to their work, Kirsty Bell looks at the house as receptacle, vehicle, model, theater, or dream space. In-depth analyses of these contemporary examples—including Jorge Pardo, Mirosław Bałka, Danh Vo, Gregor Schneider, Frances Stark, Marc Camille Chaimowicz, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Paweł Althamer, Mark Leckey, Monika Sosnowska, Gabriel Orozco, Rirkrit Tiravanija, and Andrea Zittel—are contextualized by key artists of the twentieth century such as Kurt Schwitters, Alice Neel, Edward Krasiński, Carlo Mollino, and Louise Bourgeois. A two-way flow from the domestic arena to the exhibition space becomes apparent, in which the everyday has a significant role to play in the merging of such developments as installation art, relational aesthetics, expanded collage, and performance art.

Experimental Jetset

Experimental Jetset
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 48
Release :
ISBN-10 : 8887469105
ISBN-13 : 9788887469103
Rating : 4/5 (05 Downloads)

Synopsis Experimental Jetset by : Erwin Brinkers

Hiding Making - Showing Creation

Hiding Making - Showing Creation
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 262
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9089645071
ISBN-13 : 9789089645074
Rating : 4/5 (71 Downloads)

Synopsis Hiding Making - Showing Creation by : Rachel Esner

The aim of Hiding Making - Showing Creation is twofold. In the first instance, we seek to trace the Nachleben of these studio topoi from the nineteenth century to today, in particular focusing on how artists have employed them as strategies for showing certain aspects of their practice (above all those which perpetuate the notions of artistic genius and autonomy), while carefully hiding others from view (routine, failure, craft). Secondly, in order to achieve these goals, we have adopted a method that we feel not only does justice to the richness and diversity of the topic but which, we believe, will add a new dimension to the already abundant and ever growing literature on the artist's studio.

Art & Agenda

Art & Agenda
Author :
Publisher : Gestalten Verlag
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 389955342X
ISBN-13 : 9783899553420
Rating : 4/5 (2X Downloads)

Synopsis Art & Agenda by : Silke Krohn

This book explores the current interrelationship between art, activism, and politics. It presents new visual concepts and commentaries that are being used to represent and communicate emotionally charged topics, thereby bringing them onto local political and social agendas in a way far more powerful than words alone. It looks at how art is not only reflecting and setting agendas, but also how it is influencing political reaction. Consequently, Art & Agenda is not only a perceptive documentation of current urban interventions, installations, performances, sculptures, and paintings by more than 100 young and established artists, but also points to future forms of political discourse.

Louise Brigham and the Early History of Sustainable Furniture Design

Louise Brigham and the Early History of Sustainable Furniture Design
Author :
Publisher : Springer Nature
Total Pages : 141
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9783030323417
ISBN-13 : 3030323412
Rating : 4/5 (17 Downloads)

Synopsis Louise Brigham and the Early History of Sustainable Furniture Design by : Antoinette LaFarge

During the Progressive Era, a time when the field of design was dominated almost entirely by men, a largely forgotten activist and teacher named Louise Brigham became a pioneer of sustainable furniture design. With her ingenious system for building inexpensive but sturdy “box furniture” out of recycled materials, she aimed to bring good design to the urban working class. As Antoinette LaFarge shows, Brigham forged a singular career for herself that embraced working in the American and European settlement movements, publishing a book of box furniture designs, running carpentry workshops in New York, and founding a company that offered some of the earliest ready-to-assemble furniture in the United States. Her work was a resounding critique of capitalism’s waste and an assertion of new values in design—values that stand at the heart of today’s open and green design movements.

Imperfect Innocence

Imperfect Innocence
Author :
Publisher : Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0967648033
ISBN-13 : 9780967648033
Rating : 4/5 (33 Downloads)

Synopsis Imperfect Innocence by : Dennis Scholl

Janine Antoni photographs a pair of hands joined in a M bius strip of long, polished fingernails; John Baldessari commingles images of politics and handguns and primary-colored spheres; John Coplans offers his feet as self-portrait; Gregory Crewdson tells the cinematic, mysterious tale of a random street in some suburbia somewhere; Thomas Demand constructs the illusion of a soundproof room; Rineke Dijkstra portrays herself as a bather at an indoor pool in Amsterdam; Anna Gaskell shows a drowning Alice (or is she treading water?); Dan Graham sites "New Houses behind Chain Link Fence, Jersey City, Ny"; and Andreas Gursky reveals the frenzy of the "Chicago Board of Trade." These photographs and many, many more form the Miami-based collection Debra and Dennis Scholl have amassed over the last two decades. Representing an important selection of the major figures in contemporary American and European photography, they are here accompanied by essays from Nancy Spector, James Rondeau, and Michael Rush, three of the most important curators of contemporary art.