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Böcker i Routledge Focus on Art History and Visual Studies-serien

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  • av Robert (Virginia Commonwealth University) Hobbs
    708,-

    Employing an interdisciplinary approach, this book breaks new ground by considering how Robert Motherwell's abstract expressionist art is indebted to Alfred North Whitehead's highly original process metaphysics.

  • - Tainted Goods
    av Dan (York University) Adler
    345 - 815,-

  • av Andrea Feeser
    745,-

    This book investigates Jimmie Durham¿s community-building process of making and display in four of his projects in Europe: Something ¿ Perhaps a Fugue, or an Elegy (2005); two Neapolitan nativities (2016 and ongoing); The Middle Earth (with Maria Thereza Alves, 2018); and God¿s Poems, God¿s Children (2017).

  • av Timothy (Dublin Institute of Technology Stott
    829,-

    This book studies R. Buckminster Fuller¿s World Game and similar world games, past and present.

  • - Unfinished Histories
    av Uros (University of New South Wales) Cvoro
    345 - 745,-

  • - Research, Education and Practice
    av Pedro Amado, Ana Catarina Silva & Vitor Quelhas
    729,-

    This book presents an overview of the convergence of traditional letterpress with contemporary digital design and fabrication practices.

  • av S.A. Mansbach
    369 - 839,-

  • av Julian Jason Haladyn
    345 - 745,-

  • av Francis Halsall
    769,-

    Using five case studies of contemporary art, this book uses ideas of systems and dispersion to understand identity and experience in late capitalism.¿This book considers five artists who exemplify contemporary art practice: Seth Price; Liam Gillick; Martin Creed; Hito Steyerl; and Theaster Gates. Given the diversity of materials used in art today, once-traditional artistic mediums and practices have become obsolete in describing what artists do today. Francis Halsall argues that, in the face of this obsolescence, the ideas of system and dispersion become very useful in understanding contemporary art. That is, practitioners now can be seen to be using whatever systems of distribution and display are available to them as their creative mediums. The two central arguments are first that any understanding of what art is will always be underwritten by a related view of what a human being is; and second that these both have a particular character in late capitalism or, as is named here, the Age of Dispersion.¿The book will be of interest to scholars and students working in art history, contemporary art, studio art, and theories of systems and networks.

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