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Libros antiguos y modernos

Gabor A. Nagy, Adam Bota, Jessica Buhlmann, Konstantin Dery, Dee, Nesh Ghyczy, Simone Haack, Rene Holm, Franzisca Klotz, Alejandro, Rodriguez Gonzalez, Steffi Stangl, Anne Wölk.

Technology won't save us. International Young Art from Berlin. On the Occasion of the 12th Istanbul Biennial 2011.= Teknoloji bizi kurtarmayacak. Berlin'den Uluslararasi Genç Sanat. 12. Istanbul Bienali Paralel Etkinlikleri 2011. September 15 - October 15, 2001. Curator: Uwe Goldenstein.

BSA: Berlin Selected Artists, 2011

12,00 €

Khalkedon Books, IOBA, ESA Bookshop

(Istanbul, Turquía)

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Formas de Pago

Detalles

Año de publicación
2011
Lugar de impresión
Istanbul
Autor
Gabor A. Nagy, Adam Bota, Jessica Buhlmann, Konstantin Dery, Dee, Nesh Ghyczy, Simone Haack, Rene Holm, Franzisca Klotz, Alejandro, Rodriguez Gonzalez, Steffi Stangl, Anne Wölk.
Páginas
0
Editores
BSA: Berlin Selected Artists
Formato
8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall
Materia
Turkish painting & Sculpture
Descripción
Soft cover
Conservación
Nuevo
Idiomas
Inlgés
Encuadernación
Tapa blanda

Descripción

Paperback. Pbo. Mint. Oblong large 8vo. (20 x 21 cm). In English, German, and Turkish. Color ills. 48, [5] p. "This exhibition Technology Won't Save Us: International Young Art From Berlin, running concurrently with the 12th Istanbul Biennial, bears a title whose pessimism reflects the philosophical underpinnings of many of the works in the show. Inspired by the theories of Vilém Flusser, who in 1978 predicted a "crisis of values" in a world ruled by images rather than ideas, this exhibition consists mostly of paintings depicting a bleak, dehumanized technological world. One could instance Gábor A. Nagy's collapsing of foreground and background on his canvases - suggesting that all images are ultimately, so to speak, two-dimensional - or Adam Bota's blurring of individual and group identity in his painting of dancers in a techno club. The artists in the show are all German artists of roughly the same generation - born in the 70s or later - and their visions of the world we live in now are bracing and eye-opening".
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