Studio and cube [ Texto impreso] : on the relationship between where art is made and where art is displayed / Brian O'Doherty.
Material type: TextSeries: A Buell Center/FORuM Project publication ; 1Publication details: New York : Columbia University, c2007.Description: 40 p., [40] p. de láminas : il. (algunos col.), ports ; 23 cmISBN:- 9781883584443
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Monografía prestable | Biblioteca FJM Sala general | Estudios Curatoriales | N 8520 .O26 2007 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2c, c1 | Available | 1201092 | ||
Monografía prestable | Biblioteca FJM Sala general | Estudios Curatoriales | N 8520 .O26 2007 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2c, c2 | Available | 1212695 |
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"Studio and Cube is the first volume in a series of publications related to the FORuM Project, dedicated to exploring relationships among form, politics, and contemporary life" "In Studio and Cube O'Doherty turns his attention to the moment of art's creation, exploring the mystique of the artistk's studio as the fecund space where inspiration occurs and the artwork is born." -- Contraportadas.
"This paper was presented in its expanded final version in spring 2006 at the Graduate School of Architecture and Planning of Columbia University under the auspices of the Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture" -- P.40.
Samaras's studio-bedroom -- The artist's myth -- Acconci's Seedbed -- Courbet's studio -- Delacroix's dilemma -- Nesbitt's studio tour -- Cultists' club/Warhol -- Utopia now/Rauschenberg's studio/The Bed -- The tenses of studio time -- Studio of accumulation/Bacon's studio -- Studio of reduction/Rothko -- The empty studio/Duchamp -- Caspar David Friedrich's studio -- The window -- An etiquette of looking/Hopper -- The model -- The painting-in-the-painting -- Mondrian's studio -- Brancusi's proto-museum -- The studio defined -- Perception -- The anti-white-cube.
"This completes the trio of forces that have defined the studio and in turn have influenced the nature of gallery and museum. First, there is the mythology of the artist as a creature engaged in the mysterious business of creation, whose creative act becomes a bourgeois fetish by which the public acknowledges the power of the artwork but at the same time undercuts its subersive potentials. Second, there is the transference of this mystique from the artist to the fecund space of the studio; as representations of the studio illustrate, it is a self-reflexive process, which in turn transfers to the gallery - underlining the gallery's immaculate pseudo-idealism. Third, there is the reductive studio povera, which, particulary with Mondrain and Brancusi, contributes to the clean, well-lighted place where art is shown" -- P.38.