Books. (Best of 2002).Linda Nochlin Professor and art historian Linda Nochlin is a leader in feminist art history studies. In 1971, the magazine ArtNews published an essay whose title posed a question that would spearhead an entirely new branch of art history. Yve-Alain Bois Yve-Alain Bois (born 1952) is an historian and critic of modern art. Yve-Alain Bois was born on April 16, 1952 in Constantine, Algeria. Academic Activities In a formative early experience, he rejected Michel Seuphor's mis-characterization of Piet Mondrian as a kind of Christopher S. Wood David Reed Anne M. Wagner Michael Warner Tacita Dean John Rajchman Carlos Basualdo Linda Nochlin Two books very different in approach and subject matter stand out this year: Richard Meyer's Outlaw Representation: Censorship and Homosexuality in Twentieth-Century American Art (Oxford University Press) and Georges Didi-Huberman's L'Image survivante: Histoire de l'art et temps des fantomes selon Aby Warburg (Editions de Minuit). Meyer deftly combines a close reading of individual works and intelligent social and political synthesis. Outlaw Representation not only sheds light on such important figures as Paul Cadmus, Andy Warhol, and Robert Mapplethorpe but demonstrates the remarkable role that censorship--whether governmental, unofficial, or self-imposed--has played in shaping those careers and the formal language of the art concerned. Meyer also understands the term homosexual as a complex and ever changing one, not a simple label. Didi-Huberman's book, at first glance a forbidding scholarly tome, is anything but. Not that it doesn't involve an impressive amount of research, but the ideas and interpretatio n are what really count here: the author's idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. , brilliantly illuminating approach to the work of an equally challenging precursor, Aby Warburg. It is a great read, and one hopes it will be expertly translated as soon as possible. Yve-Alain Bois This year the book I most enjoyed reading--and am still savoring, because it's to be tasted in little sips, like a great wine--is Ed Ruscha's Leave Any Information at the Signal (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press), a collection of the artist's writings and interviews. With the book's cleverly understated physical appearance-it looks like it belongs in the "do-it-yourself home repair" genre--and its huh? title, to use a favorite Ruscha phrase, you are immediately plunged into the artist's peculiar sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor" sense of humour, humor, humour , a unique blend of laconic la·con·ic adj. Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent. [Latin Lac pessimism and down-to-earth humility. In many ways he occupies a position today similar to that of Duchamp a half century ago (and like the old fox he constantly denies being the moralist mor·al·ist n. 1. A teacher or student of morals and moral problems. 2. One who follows a system of moral principles. 3. One who is unduly concerned with the morals of others. that he is). One of my favorite pearls in the book is the quip quip n. 1. A clever, witty remark often prompted by the occasion. 2. A clever, often sarcastic remark; a gibe. See Synonyms at joke. 3. A petty distinction or objection; a quibble. 4. , "Look, I'm just another member of the food chain." Another gem is Ruscha's 1972. dream of the "Information Man" telling the artist about the fate of his books once they have left the warehouse ("only 171 are placed face up with nothing covering them .. . seven have been used as swatters to kill small insects such as flies and mosquitoes," etc.): "Wouldn't it be nice," Ruscha asks, "to know these things?" Throughout, Ruscha gently mocks as a vainglorious illusion the idea that art might play a political role. The only thing he wants to do, he writes, is induce a bit of "head-scratching." In the context of the lamentable la·men·ta·ble adj. Inspiring or deserving of lament or regret; deplorable or pitiable. See Synonyms at pathetic. lam en·ta·bly adv. spectacle offered today by our politicians, this ploy might be the best antidote. Christopher S. Wood Published in French exactly thirty years ago, Hubert Damisch's A Theory of/Cloud/: Toward a History of Painting (Stanford University Press) is something like a theoretical handbook, spare and elegant, to the European painting system established in the Renaissance and dismantled in the twentieth century. Damisch shows how the pictograph pictograph - pictogram "cloud," at the moment of its appearance in the works of Mantegna and Carreggio, came to designate everything that the new painting system failed to grasp or failed to acknowledge: mystical experience, the aleatory aleatory adj. uncertain; usually applied to insurance contracts in which payment is dependent on the occurrence of a contingent event, such as injury to the insured person in an accident or fire damage to his insured building. , the infinite, the void, formless form·less adj. 1. Having no definite form; shapeless. See Synonyms at shapeless. 2. Lacking order. 3. Having no material existence. form. The cloud also pointed to the concealed mechanisms--connotation, "seeing-in," theatrical engineering--that made pictorial representation possible in the first place. The book has been read by too few American art historians. But here it is, finally, in Janet Lloyd's translation, none too soon but also, I hope, not too late. The structuralist and hyperstructuralist analytical apparatus seems only more durable, flexible--and usef ul--as time passes. David Reed Several years ago I enjoyed reading Thomas Crow's Emulation: Making Artists for Revolutionary France (Yale University Press, 1995). Since then I have come across a number of other books by art historians investigating the same period: Male Trouble: A Crisis in Representation by Abigail Solomon-Godeau (Thames & Hudson, and Necklines: The Art of Jacques-Louis David after the Terror by Ewa Lajer-Burcharth (Yale University Press, 1999). This year brought the publication of Extremities: Painting Empire in Post-Revolutionary France by Darcy Grimaldo Grigsby (Yale University Press). Thoughtfully innovative, these authors apply a high degree of scholarship and insight to dialogues on sexuality, race, and politics in painting. Because it s often difficult to articulate how politics and sexuality are intertwined in painting, it's especially exciting to see how, in these books, specific analysis of formal properties and historical context can clarify and illuminate these issues. Anne M. Wagner Open Miwon Kwon's One Place after Another: Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity (MIT Press) at the middle, and chances are you will expose its conceptual center: the spread where Serra's Tilted Arc faces off against John Ahearn's South Bronx portrait wall, the sculpted sculpt v. sculpt·ed, sculpt·ing, sculpts v.tr. 1. To sculpture (an object). 2. To shape, mold, or fashion especially with artistry or precision: mural called Back to School. The contrast weighs up what matters to each of these sculptors and their ambitions for the public sphere. Site, scale, accessibility, viewers--all are in the balance, all helped to seal these artists' controversial public fates. And those fates in turn have fed the good faith/bad faith process that more recently has produced and hindered the possibilities open to public art. What makes this book so strong is the steady course it plots through the inevitable polemical rapids. Kwon does not take sides or pull punches; she has no heroes; she weighs the evidence. She asks how the demand for publicness operates; she spells out how and when it fails. And wonder of wonders, she is as ambitious as she is unpretentious: How many writers are able to bring that off? The result is a book that actually dwells in the world and redescribes it, as indeed does art. Michael Warner Elizabeth A. Povinelli is an anthropologist whose field study has concerned an aboriginal group at a small place called Belyuen, in northern Australia. Rather unusually for an anthropologist, she has maintained her relationships there for some eighteen years and is closely involved in shepherding local land claims through the Australian court system. Since the landmark Mabo decision of 1992, some branches of the Australian state have made a version of multiculturalism into official policy, creating a kind of laboratory for studying the consequences of the multicultural vision. The verdict here is not reassuring. In The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism (Duke University Press), Povinelli shows how the new politics of difference has created an unlivable situation for the very people who are supposed to be its beneficiaries. The title aptly suggests her argument: Multiculturalism, often called "the politics of recognition," has the sort of unintended cons equences described by Hegel as the "cunning of reason." The ethical and political desire to recognize the other renews the very colonial structures of power it is supposed to correct, forcing aboriginal peoples to meet standards of authentic otherness in order to win land and state support. Unlike many writers who are eager to make a critique of liberalism, Povinelli does not strike facile postures of moral superiority. She shows that the problems stem not from the failures of multicultural policy but precisely from what makes it admirable: its strong ethical sense of obligation toward people who are different. There are technical arguments here, with powerful revisionary consequences for anthropological theory, but the book should be compelling to anyone interested in the contemporary impasse of liberalism. Tacita Dean Jeffrey Eugenides's novel Middlesex (Farrar, Straus & Giroux Farrar, Straus & Giroux Publishing company in New York City noted for its literary excellence. It was founded in 1945 by John Farrar and Roger Straus as Farrar, Straus & Co. ) is a true feat of the imagination. Written as though it were an autobiography or an act of catharsis catharsis Purging or purification of emotions through art. The term is derived from the Greek katharsis (“purgation,” “cleansing”), a medical term used by Aristotle as a metaphor to describe the effects of dramatic tragedy on the spectator: by for the central character, Cal, the book traces a rogue chromosome passing through three generations of a Greek family. Eugenides plots this genetic journey from Turkey to Detroit, through war and immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. and a half century of changes, to third-generation Greeks who have been assimilated into the American way of life, before the genes' final stop in Cal. Born a hermaphrodite hermaphrodite (hərmăf`rədīt'), animal or plant that normally possesses both male and female reproductive systems, producing both eggs and sperm. , she is raised as a girl and remains unknowing until puberty brings a painful realization. It is not easy to inhabit both stages of her life with such insight and tenderness, but Eugenides does so with great skill and affection. Middlesex is a true odyssey, one that took the author eight years to write. You feel the long period of thought and invention in the richness of its descriptions, and even though Cal's story covers several decades, the novel is in no hurry. Middlesex is a great book, and I felt bereft of its company when I'd finished it. John Rajchman In the series of overlapping essays that make up Politics and the Other Scene (Verso ver·so n. pl. ver·sos 1. A left-hand page of a book or the reverse side of a leaf, as opposed to the recto. 2. The back of a coin or medal. ), Etienne Balibar continues the attempt to rethink and reinvent politics "after Marx" on which he embarked in his Masses, Classes, Ideas (Routledge, 1994). Against the background of a growing global crisis in what he calls the "national-social state" of welfare and warfare as the basic horizon of our political possibilities, he tries to work out first, a concept of "active" or "agnostic" citizenship no longer restricted to the nation-state and capable of dealing with the problems of those that fall outside its aegis, especially with respect to Europe; second, a concept of borders (within and without) as a nonpolitical condition of politics; third, a concept of extreme "violence" linked to "ideality i·de·al·i·ty n. pl. i·de·al·i·ties 1. The state or quality of being ideal. 2. Existence in idea only. Noun 1. " as a question irreducible irreducible /ir·re·duc·i·ble/ (ir?i-doo´si-b'l) not susceptible to reduction, as a fracture, hernia, or chemical substance. ir·re·duc·i·ble adj. 1. to the great strategies of social transformation and instituted rights, which requires a new kind of politics, a new conception of "civility." In the current situation, in which questions of war and peace combine with a sense of the lost opportunities for a radical-democratic politics to emerge in 1989, after the cold war, these ample philosophical reflections acquire a renewed urgency. Carlos Basualdo As Brazilian artist Tunga has said, Brazil was multicultural from its very beginnings; the rest of the world has become so only recently. Hyperbolic hy·per·bol·ic also hy·per·bol·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or employing hyperbole. 2. Mathematics a. Of, relating to, or having the form of a hyperbola. b. as the statement is, it carries some truth, as modernity in the South American country has always centered on a complex attempt to define a national identity in a place originally constituted by the influence of West African, Portuguese, and native cultures. The picture was only further complicated in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries by the strong tide of European immigration that brought Italians, Germans, and Eastern Europeans to the new world. Christopher Dunn's Brutality Garden: Tropicalia and the Emergence of a Brazilian Counterculture coun·ter·cul·ture n. A culture, especially of young people, with values or lifestyles in opposition to those of the established culture. coun (University of North Carolina Press The University of North Carolina Press (or UNC Press), founded in 1922, is a university press that is part of the University of North Carolina. External link
Andrade was one of the founders of Brazilian modernism and a member of the Group of Five, along with Mário de four decades earlier, a group of musicians, filmmakers, artists, and writers set out to redefine "Brazilianness" as an open concept. Dunn's study is most comprehensive in describing Tropicalia as a musical phenomenon (the protagonists include international stars like Caetano Veloso, Maria Bethania, and Gilberto Gil) but provides the reader with all the proper clues to understanding the period as a whole. He succeeds in telling us about a past that paradoxically feels like our future. BOOKS: BEST OF 2002 A poet, independent critic, and curator based in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , CARLOS BASUALDO has penned essays on Helio Olticica, Edgard de Souza, and Lygia Clark. A member of the curatorial team of Documenta 11, he is also international director of the Apex Art Curatorial Program. YVE-ALAIN BOIS is Joseph Pulitzer Jr. Professor of Modern Art at Harvard University and a contributing editor of Artforum. He is the author of Painting as Model (MIT Press, 1990) and coauthor with Rosalind E. Krauss Rosalind Krauss (Born Rosalind Epstein on November 30 1941) is an American art critic, professor, and theorist who is based at Columbia University. of Formless: A User's Guide (Zone Books, 1997). London-based artist TACITA DEAN has shown her films, paintings, and drawings internationally for almost a decade. Short-listed for the Turner Prize in 1998, she will have a solo show at the Musee d'Art Moderne mo·derne adj. Striving to be modern in appearance or style but lacking taste or refinement; pretentious. [French, modern, from Old French; see modern.] Adj. 1. de la Ville de Paris Ville de Paris may refer to:
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