Art Review - March Issue - (Page 150)
Warning : session_start : The session id contains invalid characters,
valid characters are only a-z, A-Z and 0-9 in
/mnt/data/www.nxtbook.com/fx/config_1.3/global.php on line 9 Warning :
session_start : Cannot send session cache limiter - headers already sent
output started at /mnt/data/www.nxtbook.com/fx/config_1.3/global.php:9 in
/mnt/data/www.nxtbook.com/fx/config_1.3/global.php on line 9 Warning :
Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by output started
at /mnt/data/www.nxtbook.com/fx/config_1.3/global.php:9 in
/mnt/data/www.nxtbook.com/fx/config_1.3/global.php on line 10 Books:
Although the title would seem to promise analysis of art that has followed
on from and is exegetic to conceptual art of the 1960s and 70s, this
collection of essays places more emphasis on re-evaluating historiography.
The first two sections, ‘After Conceptual Art’ and ‘Dismantling
Binaries’, with essays by Benjamin Buchloh, Isabelle Graw, Helen
Molesworth, Gregor Stemmrich and others, establish the overarching
methodology of the book – the careful disembowelment of preexisting
readings of artworks. Conceptualism as the last bastion of avant-gardism,
on the verge of splintering into postmodernism, is an enduring and
alluring idea, but the book aims to scotch the generalisations required to
demark a movement, reconfiguring polarities – such as expressionistic and
conceptual representation, design and art, feminist theory and
essentialism, the public and private realm – into a series of
overlapping heterodoxies. As a subtext this does not constitute news, but
the tight locality within which the writers map their propositions makes
for a number of useful metonyms for thinking about contemporary art.
Presumptions regarding conceptualism’s negation of commodification,
visual opulence, craft-based production values, expressiveness and
institutional control come under repeated interrogation. Graw’s essay,
for instance, outlines historical points and counterpoints when gesture
and concept have operated under apparently contradictory conditions. She
suggests their reciprocal residual inflection on one another and traces
processes of value formation and relations to the market, drawing a matrix
through which to evaluate contemporary fusions. ART AFTER CONCEPTUAL ART
Edited by Alexander Alberro & Sabeth Buchmann MIT Press, £17.95/$30.00
paperback In contrast to publications like ArtReview, which emphasise an
illustrative relationship between image and text to afford easy visual
access, Art After Conceptual Art carries murky black-and white
reproductions to little elucidatory effect. Considering the subject matter
of the book, this would at first seem tenderly ironic, mirroring the
assumed anti-aesthetic stance of the subject in hand. But as the
informatic nature of conceptualism is proved to be not without its
exceptions, the book’s reproductions become more of a synonym for how
academic discourse formulates an artwork’s phenomenology at a different
level to journalism. What can be perceived as the opacity of such essays
is often down to the employment of less accessible or stable references
than imagery. While drawing connective tissue between phenomena with
recourse to other artworks, historical positions or formal or
methodological tropes, these essays reflect the anxiety of its mutability.
It would seem that the myopic view imparted by such a partially hidden
field of references is demonstrative of the aim of the book, as stirring
up the sediment of art history necessarily negates conclusiveness. Sally
O’Reilly p150-153 Books AR Mar07.indd 150 31/1/07 11:25:34 Warning : Unknown : The session id contains invalid characters, valid
characters are only a-z, A-Z and 0-9 in Unknown on line 0 Warning :
Unknown : Failed to write session data files . Please verify that the
current setting of session.save_path is correct /var/lib/php/session in
Unknown on line 0
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Art Review - March Issue
Manifesto
Dispatches
Consumed
Tales from the City
David Lynch
Marcel Dzama
Future Greats
Art Pilgrimage: Moscow
Mixed Media: Moving Images
Mixed Media: Photography
Mixed Media: Digital
Reviews
Book Reviews
On the Town
On the Record
Art Review - March Issue
https://www.nxtbookmedia.com