Description: .Ex[amining a new generation of environmental artists, Nobody's Property probes the reasons for its appearance at the beginning of the twenty-first century. The exhibition features the work of seven artists and two artist-teams: Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla, Francis Al s, Yael Bartana, Andrea Geyer, Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, Emre Hüner, Matthew Day Jackson, Lucy Raven, and Santiago Sierra. Using media that range from video and photography to digital animation, performance, and assemblage, these artists parse the economic, geopolitical, and phantasmatic conditions of land and space. Their methods are as varied as their media, but they tend to coalesce around one of four approaches: the investigatory, the parafictional, the interrogative, and the interruptive. While some of the artists in the exhibition explore historical configurations of space, gauging its symbolic import for specific actors at specific moments in time, others consider concrete land-sites—sites, that is, with a particular geographical correlate. Among these land-sites are the cities of Jerusalem and Beirut, the island of Vieques, the border town of Juarez, the Navajo Nation, and the industrial center of Tongling. Each one crystallizes a larger debate around issues such as war, globalization, cultural patrimony, civil rights, and national sovereignty. Hardcover. First Edition. 144 pages.
Price: 10 USD
Location: Jackson Heights, New York
End Time: 2024-12-05T20:01:10.000Z
Shipping Cost: 6.13 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
PublishedOn: 2010-09-07
Book Title: Nobody's Property : Art, Land, Space, 2000-2010
Number of Pages: 144 Pages
Language: English
Publisher: Princeton Tec University Art Museum
Publication Year: 2010
Topic: Conceptual, History / Contemporary (1945-), Criticism & Theory, Environmental & Land Art
Item Height: 0.7 in
Illustrator: Yes
Genre: Art
Item Weight: 40.1 Oz
Item Length: 11.1 in
Author: Kelly Baum
Item Width: 9.2 in
Format: Hardcover