Bookbot

Walther König

    Thomas J. Price. Matter of Place
    Toby Christian. Commuters
    Two Works Series Vol.2: Tschabalala Self / Angela Y. Davis, 'Art on the Frontline: Mandate for a People´s Culture'
    Aline Bouvy. Cruising Bye
    Tacita Dean. One Hundred and Fifty Years of Painting
    Lüpertz Loredan
    • Lüpertz Loredan

      Ausst. Kat. Palazzo Loredan, Venedig 2022

      • 200pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      Lüpertz Loredan
    • Tacita Dean. One Hundred and Fifty Years of Painting

      Ausst. Kat. Mudam Luxembourg – Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean, 2022

      • 113pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      Two iconic female artists reflect on life, death, motherhood and painting This volume presents the full transcript of a conversation between artists Luchita Hurtado (born 1920) and Julie Mehretu (born 1970). Recorded on 16mm film by fellow artist Tacita Dean (born 1965), the discussion took place on their shared birthday in 2020, marking a combined age of 150 years.

      Tacita Dean. One Hundred and Fifty Years of Painting
    • Aline Bouvy. Cruising Bye

      Ausst. Kat. MACS (Musée des Arts Contemporains) Grand-Hornu, Belgium

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      Aline Bouvy. Cruising Bye
    • In her stirring essay, Art on the Frontline, scholar and activist icon Angela Y. Davis asked, in 1985, ?How do we collectively acknowledge our popular cultural legacy and communicate it to the masses of people, most of whom have been denied access to the social spaces reserved for arts and culture?? Looking to the cultural forms born of Afro-American struggles, Davis insists that we attempt to understand, reclaim and glean insight from0these in preparing a political offensive against the racial oppression endemic to capitalism. Working from a site of racial uprising some 35 years later, artist Tschabalala Self responds to Davis?s words with a new series of characteristically vibrant, challenging and provocative works on paper. Her series of three individual subjects emerge collectively as something greater than their parts, suggesting in the ebbs and flows in joy and disdain a kind of0shared social consciousness

      Two Works Series Vol.2: Tschabalala Self / Angela Y. Davis, 'Art on the Frontline: Mandate for a People´s Culture'
      4,7
    • Toby Christian. Commuters

      • 132pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      ‘The ghosts of Gertrude Stein and Francis Ponge hover about these short texts, in which objects become subjects, surface depth and language reality.’ – Tom McCarthy‘In Commuters, the material world is being remade: as confounding and saturated as we pretend that it isn’t.’ – Sally O’Reilly‘…a way of seeing that is startlingly original, and profoundly consoling.’ – Claire-Louise BennettAboard a beaten bus, fragile passengers are transported to a gloomy stop, while a cat stares silently, alone in a stationed trailer.‘Commuters’, the third book of writing by British artist Toby Christian (b.1983), bids us to work with a new train of accounts, travelling between objects and spaces from Vienna to Matera, Liverpool to London.Written in Christian’s trademark dazzling detail, passages teem with feral poetics in descriptions that tilt between the headspaces of guided meditation and hyper-forensic rave. ‘Commuters’ is a searching shuttle through alternative text, zooming to a stellar end.With an introduction by Chris Fite-Wassilak.

      Toby Christian. Commuters
      4,5
    • Lutz Bacher. Open the Kimono

      • 324pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      A chronological record of overheard and collected remarks, from movie quotes to elevator chats This artist’s book by New York–based artist Lutz Bacher (born 1962) is a chronological record of remarks collected by Bacher from a variety of sources, including cable television advertisements, movies, news broadcasts, radio, novels, airplanes, subways, sidewalks and elevators between 2013 and 2018.

      Lutz Bacher. Open the Kimono
      4,0
    • Christina Quarles / W.E.B. Du Bois: Spirituals Strivings Two Works Series Vol. 4.

      Ausst. Kat. Afterall, Central Saint Martins University of the Arts, London

      "In 1903 W. E. B. Du Bois's text The Souls of Black Folk made history as a work of sociological thought, and would go on to become a cornerstone of African American literature. In it, Du Bois combined music, history and memoir to advance a vital message of resistance in the uniquely dehumanising context of the so-called 'Jim Crow' era. It was in this collection that Du Bois, in 'Of Our Spiritual Strivings', wrote of the 'double consciousness' experienced by the Black subject -- a 'sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity'. Refusing this fate, Du Bois passionately and creatively makes the case for the rights of Black people of the South to be treated with equality and justice. Over a century later, artist Christina Quarles brings new energy to Du Bois's unfinished project, speaking to his melodious text with her own distinctive visual poetics, testing and inverting the 'double consciousness' idea. Quarles, whose work is informed by her own daily experience with ambiguity, engages with the world from a position that is multiply situated."-- Provided by publisher

      Christina Quarles / W.E.B. Du Bois: Spirituals Strivings Two Works Series Vol. 4.
      4,1
    • Peter Swinnen. I prefer not to....

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      This book is a free associative recount of the 'I Prefer Not To' lecture series staged by architect Peter Swinnen at the ETH Department of Architecture (Zürich).Twelve particular guests touch upon various attitudes of professional abstinence and/or obstinacy.In an offbeat manner, 'I Prefer Not To' can be understood as a critical re-assessment of architecture's social and political ethos, often tightly contained and devoid of any unforeseen mischief.Through the words, positions and works of the speaker guests 'I Prefer Not To' managed -- for a brief moment -- to install an unformatted stage for problematization and debate.Each lecture is introduced by an editor's note, contextualizing specific choices and unadapted zooms.Contributors include Luc Tuymans, Christian Kerez, Something Fantastic, Anne Lacaton, Jan De Vylder, Philip Ursprung, Tom Emerson, Laurent Stalder, François Charbonnet, Anri Sala, Maarten Delbeke, Finn Williams, Arno Brandlhuber, ETH Studio Swinnen, Sophia Holst and Beatriz Van Houtte.

      Peter Swinnen. I prefer not to....
      4,0