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Industry and intelligence : contemporary art since 1820 / / Liam Gillick



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Autore: Gillick Liam <1964-> Visualizza persona
Titolo: Industry and intelligence : contemporary art since 1820 / / Liam Gillick Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: New York, New York : , : Columbia University Press, , 2016
©2016
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (209 p.)
Disciplina: 709.04
Soggetto topico: Art, Modern - Themes, motives
Art and society
Soggetto genere / forma: Electronic books.
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Nota di contenuto: Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Creative Disruption in the Age of Soft Revolutions -- 1. Contemporary Art Does Not Account for That Which Is Taking Place -- 2. Projection and Parallelism -- 3. Art as a Pile: Split and Fragmented Simultaneously -- 4. 1820: Erasmus and Upheaval -- 5. ASAP Futures, Not Infinite Future -- 6. 1948: B. F. Skinner and Counter-Revolution -- 7. Abstract -- 8. 1963: Herman Kahn and Projection -- 9. The Complete Curator -- 10. Maybe It Would Be Better If We Worked in Groups of Three? -- 11. The Return of the Border -- 12. 1974: Volvo and the Mise-en-Scène -- 13. The Experimental Factory -- 14. Nostalgia for the Group -- 15. Why Work? -- Notes -- Index
Sommario/riassunto: The history of modern art is often told through aesthetic breakthroughs that sync well with cultural and political change. From Courbet to Picasso, from Malevich to Warhol, it is accepted that art tracks the disruptions of industrialization, fascism, revolution, and war. Yet filtering the history of modern art only through catastrophic events cannot account for the subtle developments that lead to the profound confusion at the heart of contemporary art.In Industry and Intelligence, the artist Liam Gillick writes a nuanced genealogy to help us appreciate contemporary art's engagement with history even when it seems apathetic or blind to current events. Taking a broad view of artistic creation from 1820 to today, Gillick follows the response of artists to incremental developments in science, politics, and technology. The great innovations and dislocations of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have their place in this timeline, but their traces are alternately amplified and diminished as Gillick moves through artistic reactions to liberalism, mass manufacturing, psychology, nuclear physics, automobiles, and a host of other advances. He intimately ties the origins of contemporary art to the social and technological adjustments of modern life, which artists struggled to incorporate truthfully into their works.
Titolo autorizzato: Industry and intelligence  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 0-231-54096-5
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910465970403321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Serie: Bampton lectures in America.