A voyage on the North Sea : art in the age of the post-medium condition /

"Exploring the nature of the aesthetic medium has been at the heart of much of modern art. For exponents of high modernism, following the lead of Clement Greenberg, the essence of each medium--what made it specific--lay inherently in its own particular material properties. Accordingly, the impo...

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Gorde:
Xehetasun bibliografikoak
Egile nagusia: Krauss, Rosalind E. (Egilea)
Formatua: Liburua
Hizkuntza:English
Argitaratua:New York : Thames & Hudson, 2000.
Ã1999
Saila:Walter Neurath memorial lectures ; 31st.
Gaiak:
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100 1 |a Krauss, Rosalind E.,  |e author.  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n50044024 
245 1 2 |a A voyage on the North Sea :  |b art in the age of the post-medium condition /  |c Rosalind Krauss. 
246 3 0 |a Art in the age of the post-medium condition 
264 1 |a New York :  |b Thames & Hudson,  |c 2000. 
264 4 |c Ã1999 
300 |a 64 pages :  |b illustrations ;  |c 21 cm. 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
336 |a still image  |b sti  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a unmediated  |b n  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a volume  |b nc  |2 rdacarrier 
490 1 |a 31st of the Walter Neurath memorial lectures 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references (pages 57-61). 
520 1 |a "Exploring the nature of the aesthetic medium has been at the heart of much of modern art. For exponents of high modernism, following the lead of Clement Greenberg, the essence of each medium--what made it specific--lay inherently in its own particular material properties. Accordingly, the import of painting was its 'flatness,' as exemplified by the monochrome canvas--painting so reduced that nothing is left but a mere flat object. But some artists rejected this reductivist description of the aesthetic medium as inadequate. Citing the examples of film, television and video, they understood and articulated the medium as aggregative, as a complex structure of interlocking and interdependent technical supports and layered conventions distinct from physical properties. For them, the specificity of a medium lay in its constitutive hererogeneity--the fact that it always differs from itself. Here, Rosalind Krauss positions the work of Marcel Broodthaers within this alternative narrative. Referring to the Belgian artist's films, books, graphic design and museum 'fictions,' she presents Broodthaers as standing at, and thus standing for, the 'complex' of the self-differing medium. Professor Krauss argues that his work demonstrates that the specificity of mediums, even modernist ones, can never be simply collapsed into the physicality of their support. Moreover, she identifies Broodthaers's example as being fundamental to those artists of today who embrace the idea of differential specificity; artists who understand that their task is to look beyond reductivist modernism in order to reinvent or rearticulate the medium in the age of the most-medium condition."--Book flap 
590 |a 9/8/22 BT 
600 1 0 |a Broodthaers, Marcel  |x Criticism and interpretation. 
650 0 |a Conceptual art  |z Belgium. 
650 0 |a Avant-garde (Aesthetics)  |x History  |y 20th century. 
830 0 |a Walter Neurath memorial lectures ;  |v 31st.  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42026291 
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