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Artforum #56-1 – September 2017

 - Artforum #56-1
In their September 2017 issue Artforum look ahead at 40 exhibitions worldwide, Huey Copeland and Frank Wilkerson on museums, monuments, and race, reviews on the 57th Venice Biennale, Documenta 14, and Skulptur Projekte Münster, Amy Taubin on Top of the Lake: China Girl, and more.
This month in Artforum:

September Preview: We look ahead to 40 shows worldwide—Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, Art and China After 1989, François Morellet, Mona Hatoum, Camille Henrot, Jorge Pinheiro, Takashi Murakami, and more.

Museums, Monuments, and Race: Huey Copeland talks with Frank Wilderson about the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the National Museum of the American Indian:

“What do you do with a group of people against whom the whole world is at war? Mainstream institutions of representation, no matter how liberal, aren't willing to wallow in this contradiction.” —Frank Wilderson

The Grand Tour: Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, Daniel Birnbaum, Claire Bishop, Diedrich Diederichsen, and more on the 57th Venice Biennale, Documenta 14, and Skulptur Projekte Münster:

“Maria Eichhorn's work engages us not only in a continuing reflection on the histories of the victims of German Nazi persecution, but on the actual motivations for fascism's renewed resources and motivations in the present.”
—Benjamin H. D. Buchloh

“This is the Documenta I always wanted: difficult, demanding, experimental, and unafraid to take risks.”
—Nuit Banai

“Gone are the days when art was free to be reckless, unfriendly, antisocial, aloof, aggressive, critical, intellectual, overblown—in a word, interesting.”
—Diedrich Diederichsen

On The Cover: Daniela Stöppel on Kerstin Brätsch: Innovation:

“Brätsch's contemporary rituals allow one to get closer to a world of unreality and chance, beauty and conviviality.”
—Daniela Stöppel

Historical Projections: Erika Balsom on the art of Rosa Barba:

“Barba's films ask what will be kept and what will be lost as the catastrophe of modernity pushes ever onward.”
—Erika Balsom

Openings: Johanna Fateman on Diamond Stingily:
“Stingily leaves much unsaid, and the breathing room around her understated sculptures, made from beauty supplies or hardware, draws out their symbolic and melancholic power.”
—Johanna Fateman

And: Michael Lobel on James Rosenquist; Tim Griffin and Steven Holl on Vito Acconci; John Elderfield on Howard Hodgkin; Michele Faguet on Laura Horelli and German postcolonialism.

Plus: James Quandt on Abbas Kiarostami's 24 Frames; Amy Taubin on Jane Campion's Top of the Lake: China Girl; Ben Kafka on Damion Searls's The Inkblots; Adam Jasper on Harun Harun Farocki''s final project; and cartoonist Pendleton Ward shares his Top Ten.
Artforum is the leading contemporary art magazine and holds the unique roles of institution, nexus, and foremost tastemaker of the art world. It delivers the highest level of critical discourse about contemporary visual culture to a diverse international audience and is often the first to identify artists whose work comes to define eras. Launched in California in 1962, Artforum moved to New York in 1967, where it is still based.
 
published in September 2017
English edition
26,5 x 26,5 cm (softcover)
304 pages (ill.)
 
13.00
 
in stock
 
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