Location
Title Statement Sculpture unlimited 2 : materiality in times of immateriality
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint) Sternberg Press, Berlin : c2015
SAB Classification Code
Physical Description
Bibliography, etc. Note Includes bibliographical references.
Formatted Contents Note Introduction: Materiality in times of immateriality / Eva Grubinger and Jörg Heiser -- Beyond ADD / Mark Leckey -- Thoughts on the space of centemporary sculpture, or: Stringing along / Timotheus Vermeulen -- Soft matter / Christiane Sauer -- Dust and exhaustion: the labor of media materialism / Jussi Parikka -- "Les immatériaux" thirty years later: memories of a sociological survey / Nathalie Heinich -- Relics from lost futures / Mark Fisher -- The future was at her fingertips / Aleksandra Domanović -- Concluding discussion / Mark Fisher, Eva Grubinger, Nathalie Heinich, Jörg Heiser, Timotheus Vermeulen
Subject - Chronological Term
Subject - Topical Term
ISBN
Waiting
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*00140036
*00520151009030933.2
*008151008s2015 gw a 000 0 eng c
*020 $a978-3-95679-102-4
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*035 $a(Ko)46192
*040 $aKo
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*24510$aSculpture unlimited 2 :$bmateriality in times of immateriality /$cEva Grubinger and Jörg Heiser, eds.
*260 $aBerlin :$bSternberg Press,$cc2015
*300 $a142 s. :$bill. ;$c20 cm.
*504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
*5050 $tIntroduction: Materiality in times of immateriality /$rEva Grubinger and Jörg Heiser --$tBeyond ADD /$rMark Leckey --$tThoughts on the space of centemporary sculpture, or: Stringing along /$rTimotheus Vermeulen --$tSoft matter /$rChristiane Sauer --$tDust and exhaustion: the labor of media materialism /$rJussi Parikka --$t"Les immatériaux" thirty years later: memories of a sociological survey /$rNathalie Heinich --$tRelics from lost futures /$rMark Fisher --$tThe future was at her fingertips /$rAleksandra Domanović --$tConcluding discussion /$tMark Fisher, Eva Grubinger, Nathalie Heinich, Jörg Heiser, Timotheus Vermeulen
*648 7$a2010-talet$2sao
*650 7$aSkulpltur $2sao
*650 0$aSculpture, Modern$y20th century$xHistory.
*650 0$aSculpture, Modern$y20th century.
*7001 $aGrubinger, Eva,$d1970-$4edt
*7001 $aHeiser, Jörg$4edt
*7001 $aLeckey, Mark$4ctb
*841 $5Ko$ax a$b1510084u 8 1001uu 0901128$e4
*852 $5Ko$bKo$hKONST - Id$lSCU
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While the first volume Sculpture Unlimited (2011) dealt with the question of how the contemporary field of sculpture can be defined in a useful and stimulating manner against its long history, the second volume looks at the present and future. Once again edited by Eva Grubinger and J rg Heiser, with contributions by internationally reputed artists and scholars, this volume poses the following question: If we assume that computers and algorithms increasingly control our lives, that they not only regulate social and communicative traffic but also produce new materials and things, does this increase or decrease the space for artistic imagination and innovation? Where is the place of art and sculpture, provided we don't want art to resort to merely maintaining aesthetic traditions?
With sculpture as a leading reference, the contributions address theory, aesthetics, and technology: Do current philosophical movements such as new materialism and object-oriented ontology affect our notion of the art object? Does so-called post-Internet art have a future? And how does the Internet of Things relate to objects and things in art?
Contributors Aleksandra Domanovic, Mark Fisher, Nathalie Heinich, Mark Leckey, Jean-Fran ois Lyotard and Bernard Blist ne, Jussi Parikka, Christiane Sauer, Timotheus Vermeulen