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Non classé

  • # 117 | Sausage | Morgan Labar

    Non classé comical effect, industrialization 2

    When contemporary artists use the sausage as a visual, a comical effect is to be expected. For Morgan Labar, who wrote his PhD on silliness and stupidity, this foodstuff, popularized through industrialization, deserves to be recontextualized within its long history. In earlier art and literature ribald and scatological references abounded but it is in ...

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  • # 116 | Feigned Books | Philippe Cordez

    Non classé, Things Bertold Brecht, Books 0

    Philippe Cordez takes an interest in book-shaped objects, whose functions may vary. A few examples: mechanical clock, drinking vessel, commode, firearm, gas cigarette lighter, and piggy bank. Cordez thus adds a chapter to the history of books since the Middle Ages. He does so in line with the work of Kurt Köster, who, as a pioneer on ...

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  • # 115 | Duchamp, words, and things | Thierry Davila

    Non classé, Things Duchamp, infra thin, infra-thin, infrathin, ready made 1

    The readymade is one of art history’s most used, discussed, studied object. It is almost never written in the same manner, and its definition is made all the more unstable by Duchamp’s own refusal to make it into a “school”. In his wake, generations of artists have subverted it for their own profit, sometimes ...

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  • # 114 | Dragster | Paul Ardenne

    Non classé, Things dragster, machine, Speeding up 0

    The dragster is a machine-thing whose principal asset resides in its extreme speed: it brutally accelerates over a very short route, attaining the record of more than 500 kph.  Connected to the danger incurred by its driver, its mythology looms large in certain milieus Paul Ardenne studies as an anthropologist of art in our ...

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  • # 111 | Perfume and its Bottle | Richard Stamelman

    Non classé, Things Francis Ponge, Perfume, Perfume bottle, Pierre Bonnard 1

    A question is being raised more and more often these days: How far must one go to know a thing?  Is one to open it up to the point of imagining that one can touch its “essence” or else, on the contrary, is it better to remain on the surface while investigating its most ...

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  • # 106 | Arcimboldo’s Metamorphoses | Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann

    Non classé, Things nature, portrait, Still Life 0

    Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann has helped to bring Giuseppe Arcimboldo out of the comfort zone wherein critics had treated him as an ahistorical painter.  Kaufmann has contributed toward a critical revision of Arcimboldo’s oeuvre as a whole by placing it back within the context in which Arcimboldo lived and painted, including his connection with the ...

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  • #105 | Everyday Politics | Paula Diehl

    Non classé, Things Symbol, United States 0

    Paula Diehl takes an interest in political symbols and their usage in political ceremonies as well as in everyday life.  Proceeding from an empirical study she conducted in the United States in 2014, she notes that the usage of political symbols plays several roles.  The individuals she surveyed own several everyday objects bearing political ...

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  • # 104 | Work-Related Things | Camille Richert

    Non classé, Things Industrial Civilization, Public Spaces, Social Ties 0

    Camille Richert is preparing a dissertation around the notion of labor in Contemporary Art. Starting from the principle that our age has been altered by some major technological changes, she takes an interest in artists who are sensitive to the tools, materials, and products of the new forms of work—to things but also to ...

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  • #103 | Technological Statuary on Extraterrestrial Ground | Elsa De Smet

    Non classé, Things moon, rocket 0

    Considering a rocket as a gigantic thing, this object refers us back to the history of science and technology.  But Elsa De Smet also describes it in industrial and political terms.  Then, before being something really constructed, it was a prominent fantasy and, necessarily, a representation—in its own way, a “still life.” Laurence Bertrand Dorléac Technological ...

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  • # 102 | The Albums of Yoko Ono | Prudence Bidet

    Hartung Bergman Seminar, Non classé, Things No tags 4

    Prudence Bidet studies the albums of Yoko Ono, who mixes everything together: music, politics, and autobiography. Less studied than the rest of her creative work, these singular objects, especially her first solo albums, contain strong symbolic charges while displaying her desire for liberation.  In her fourth album, in particular, Feeling the Space (1973), she ...

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ISSN 2268-3119