9783037784273-303778427X-Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation

Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation

ISBN-13: 9783037784273
ISBN-10: 303778427X
Author: Mark Wigley
Publication date: 2018
Publisher: Lars Müller Publishers/Columbia GSAAP
Format: Paperback 528 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9783037784273
ISBN-10: 303778427X
Author: Mark Wigley
Publication date: 2018
Publisher: Lars Müller Publishers/Columbia GSAAP
Format: Paperback 528 pages

Summary

Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation (ISBN-13: 9783037784273 and ISBN-10: 303778427X), written by authors Mark Wigley, was published by Lars Müller Publishers/Columbia GSAAP in 2018. With an overall rating of 4.4 stars, it's a notable title among other Individual Architects & Firms (Architecture) books. You can easily purchase or rent Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Individual Architects & Firms books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation is a detective story. It relentlessly pursues the legendary but invisible Anarchitecture Group show and Gordon Matta-Clark’s celebrated, hyper-visible, yet equally misunderstood building cuts. Of all the shows at the fabled 112 Greene Street space―an epicenter of New York’s downtown art scene in the 1970s―the Anarchitecture Group show of March 1974 is a constant reference point in discussion, despite the almost complete lack of evidence about it. It has become a foundational myth. Gordon Matta-Clark was supposedly the ringleader of an extended series of meetings with fellow artists that operated as a kind of collective research seminar challenging all conventional understandings of architecture. The meetings of this so-called Anarchitecture Group culminated in the exhibition as an anonymous statement in unlabeled photographs. But did it actually happen? It exists only through oblique archival traces and the conflicting memories of the participants. An unprecedented dossier of unpublished archival evidence is assembled here and subjected to ever deeper forensic analysis―cutting into both the concepts and the cuts to see what the elusive, mysterious, seductive, yet viral word Anarchitecture offers us today.

Contains interviews with Tina Girouard, Jene Highstein, Dickie Landry, Jeffrey Lew, Richard Nonas, Bernard Kirschenbaum and Susan Weil Kirschenbaum.

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