9780929445168-0929445163-Conceptual Art

Conceptual Art

ISBN-13: 9780929445168
ISBN-10: 0929445163
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Paul Wood
Publication date: 2002
Publisher: Delano Greenidge Editions
Format: Hardcover 80 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780929445168
ISBN-10: 0929445163
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Paul Wood
Publication date: 2002
Publisher: Delano Greenidge Editions
Format: Hardcover 80 pages

Summary

Conceptual Art (ISBN-13: 9780929445168 and ISBN-10: 0929445163), written by authors Paul Wood, was published by Delano Greenidge Editions in 2002. With an overall rating of 4.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Conceptual Art (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

As befits an art of the mind, 'Conceptual art' poses problems right from the start. What was it? When was it? (Is it still around or is it 'history'?) Where was it? Who made it? (Are we to consider 'X' a Conceptual artist or not?) And of course, the umbrella-question: why? Why produce a form of visual art premised on undercutting the two principal characteristics of art as it has come down to us in Western culture, namely the production of objects to look at, and the act of contemplative looking itself?...These are real questions ... Looked at in one way, Conceptual art gets to be like Lewis Carroll's Cheshire cat, dissolving away until nothing is left but a grin: a handful of works made over a few short years by a small number of artists, the most important of whom soon went on to do other things. Then again, regarded under a different aspect, Conceptual art can seem like nothing less than the hinge around which the past turned into the present: the modernist past of painting as the fine art, the canon from Cezanne to Rothko, versus the postmodernist present where contemporary exhibition spaces are full of anything and everything, from sharks to photographs, piles of rubbish to multi-screen videos -- full, it seems, of everything except modernist painting.

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