| Titre : | PARKETT N°87 - 2010 / THE PARKETT SERIES WITH CONTEMPORARY ARTISTS : ANNETTE KELM KATHARINA FRITSCH CERITH WYN EVANS KELLEY WALKER | | Type de document : | texte imprimé | | Auteurs : | Collectif, Auteur | | Editeur : | PARKETT | | Année de publication : | 2010 | | Présentation : | couv. coul., illus. coul. et noir&blanc | | Format : | 25,5 CM | | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 6069 | | Prix : | 30 € | | Langues : | Allemand (ger) Langues originales : Anglais (eng) | | Catégories : | 3. Culture:3.45 Arts:Style artistique:Art contemporain
| | Index. décimale : | 700 Les arts. Beaux arts et arts décoratifs | | Note de contenu : | Introduction
The artists presented in this issue of Parkett cultivate a highly sophisticated aesthetic as they come to terms with the entrenched meanings of forms and images. Demonstrating a remarkable autonomy and bringing to light hidden potential, their work can be liberating and awe-inspiring but equally disturbing and unsettling. Katharina Fritsch, Annette Kelm, Cerith Wyn Evans and Kelley Walker each chart highly distinctive territory of their own and yet, in the pages of this issue, we come across sparks that jumpstart moments of mutual contact.
Twenty years ago Parkett already devoted an issue to Katharina Fritsch as a Collaboration artist. She has since created numerous sculptures of hypnotic impact, some united as ensembles in space that enter into a dialogue with large-format screenprints—luminously immaterial images. At times, her colors and images seem to lead a life of their own, which does not, however, prevent them from clashing with each other in a fashion as sublime as it is ordinary. The extent to which her works address our collective fantasies is pointed out by Jean-Pierre Criqui, whose study of the role animals play in this oeuvre reveals a “conjunction between interiority and otherness”. It is not color but light that Cerith Wyn Evans bridles, ignoring all convention in using it to communicate “messages.” He even exploits the universe as his picture support, shooting powerful spotlights into the night sky to create a staccato of light that beams literary quotations in Morse code. Evans’ edition for Parkett consists of a wall-mounted equal sign that radiates the warm, indeed hot, energy of wishes in a ploy to enrich the coolness of the neon idiom. In Annette Kelm’s photographs, viewers will be disappointed if they seek to rely on “classification by means of aesthetic and conceptually defined recognition factors” or engage in a “quest for content and narrative,” as Beatrix Ruf puts it in her essay titled “Twisting and Turning”. The singular and self-contained beauty of Kelm’s photographed images emerges—like painting—in processes of composing, selecting and rejecting.
In his pictures, objects, and installations, Kelley Walker works with the patently predefined meanings of found images and materials—so much so, that his artist colleague and writer Glenn Ligon speaks about Kelley Walker’s “Negro Problem”. It is a “race problem”—in quotes—an obsession that takes on a cultural, American dilemma. Describing in detail how Walker plans an exhibition, Johanna Burton inquires into the way in which the artist as “pioneer” renders “ostensibly ‘nonnormative’ histories, desires, and aesthetics central and visible”. This volume also features an Insert project by Allen Ruppersberg.
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PARKETT N°87 - 2010 / THE PARKETT SERIES WITH CONTEMPORARY ARTISTS : ANNETTE KELM KATHARINA FRITSCH CERITH WYN EVANS KELLEY WALKER [texte imprimé] / Collectif, Auteur . - [S.l.] : PARKETT, 2010 . - : couv. coul., illus. coul. et noir&blanc ; 25,5 CM. ISSN : 6069 : 30 € Langues : Allemand ( ger) Langues originales : Anglais ( eng) | Catégories : | 3. Culture:3.45 Arts:Style artistique:Art contemporain
| | Index. décimale : | 700 Les arts. Beaux arts et arts décoratifs | | Note de contenu : | Introduction
The artists presented in this issue of Parkett cultivate a highly sophisticated aesthetic as they come to terms with the entrenched meanings of forms and images. Demonstrating a remarkable autonomy and bringing to light hidden potential, their work can be liberating and awe-inspiring but equally disturbing and unsettling. Katharina Fritsch, Annette Kelm, Cerith Wyn Evans and Kelley Walker each chart highly distinctive territory of their own and yet, in the pages of this issue, we come across sparks that jumpstart moments of mutual contact.
Twenty years ago Parkett already devoted an issue to Katharina Fritsch as a Collaboration artist. She has since created numerous sculptures of hypnotic impact, some united as ensembles in space that enter into a dialogue with large-format screenprints—luminously immaterial images. At times, her colors and images seem to lead a life of their own, which does not, however, prevent them from clashing with each other in a fashion as sublime as it is ordinary. The extent to which her works address our collective fantasies is pointed out by Jean-Pierre Criqui, whose study of the role animals play in this oeuvre reveals a “conjunction between interiority and otherness”. It is not color but light that Cerith Wyn Evans bridles, ignoring all convention in using it to communicate “messages.” He even exploits the universe as his picture support, shooting powerful spotlights into the night sky to create a staccato of light that beams literary quotations in Morse code. Evans’ edition for Parkett consists of a wall-mounted equal sign that radiates the warm, indeed hot, energy of wishes in a ploy to enrich the coolness of the neon idiom. In Annette Kelm’s photographs, viewers will be disappointed if they seek to rely on “classification by means of aesthetic and conceptually defined recognition factors” or engage in a “quest for content and narrative,” as Beatrix Ruf puts it in her essay titled “Twisting and Turning”. The singular and self-contained beauty of Kelm’s photographed images emerges—like painting—in processes of composing, selecting and rejecting.
In his pictures, objects, and installations, Kelley Walker works with the patently predefined meanings of found images and materials—so much so, that his artist colleague and writer Glenn Ligon speaks about Kelley Walker’s “Negro Problem”. It is a “race problem”—in quotes—an obsession that takes on a cultural, American dilemma. Describing in detail how Walker plans an exhibition, Johanna Burton inquires into the way in which the artist as “pioneer” renders “ostensibly ‘nonnormative’ histories, desires, and aesthetics central and visible”. This volume also features an Insert project by Allen Ruppersberg.
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