Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Photography, Ecology and Historical Change in the Anthropocene
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 237

Photography, Ecology and Historical Change in the Anthropocene

Moving beyond existing scholarship, this book connects photography, archives, ecology and historical change and critically applies the Anthropocene as framework to the in-depth study of artists’ projects. It discards single modes of seeing environmental transformations in favour of a multiple and de-centred environmental imagination. Bergit Arends uses multidisciplinary perspectives to view localized environmental, social and political issues through research-based artistic practices. The book not only makes available original research into newly and recently discovered archives of ecological and historical change but also shows how this research is manifest in exhibition formats. This boo...

Doing Museology Differently
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 308

Doing Museology Differently

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2013-09-05
  • -
  • Publisher: Routledge

One might believe that museum studies is a stable field of academic inquiry based on a set of familiar institutional forms and functions. But as institutions museums have never been stable or singular, and neither has the discipline of museum studies. Museum studies as a field of academic inquiry has received little critical attention. One result of this neglect has arguably been a lack of invention in museum studies; another is the distancing of academic museum studies from museum practice. Doing Museology Differently charts a different course. A critical‐creative reflection on academic practice, the book takes the form of a narrative account of museological fieldwork. A research story un...

Oceans
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

Oceans

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2023-06-06
  • -
  • Publisher: MIT Press

OCEANS attends to the inextricable human and nonhuman agencies that affect and are affected by the sea and its running currents within contemporary art and visual culture. Oceans cover more than 70 percent of the Earth’s surface, dividing and connecting humans, who carry saltwater in their blood, sweat and tears. They also represent a powerful nonhuman force, rising, flooding, heating and raging in unprecedented ways as the climate crisis unfolds. Artists have envisioned the sea as a sublime wilderness, home to mythical creatures and bizarre species, a source of life and death, a site of new beginnings and tragic endings, both wondrous and disastrous. From migration to melting ice caps, th...

House: from Display to BACK to FRONT
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 176

House: from Display to BACK to FRONT

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2013-02-09
  • -
  • Publisher: KT press

An overview of a series of installations made in the artists’ home in Greenwich, 2001-2011, supported by Cafe Gallery Projects. Each section of the book documents a different project. Each section is introduced by the artist. Essay by Katy Deepwell. This epub contains extensive photo-documentation of each of the projects and external links to video clips showing documentary footage inside each installation.

Madness in Contemporary British Theatre
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 229

Madness in Contemporary British Theatre

This book considers the representation of madness in contemporary British theatre, examining the rich relationship between performance and mental health, and questioning how theatre can potentially challenge dominant understandings of mental health. Carefully, it suggests what it means to represent madness in theatre, and the avenues through which such representations can become radical, whereby theatre can act as a site of resistance. Engaging with the heterogeneity of madness, each chapter covers different attributes and logics, including: the constitution and institutional structures of the contemporary asylum; the cultural idioms behind hallucination; the means by which suicide is apprehended and approached; how testimony of the mad person is interpreted and encountered. As a study that interrogates a wide range of British theatre across the past 30 years, and includes a theoretical interrogation of the politics of madness, this is a crucial work for any student or researcher, across disciplines, considering the politics of madness and its relationship to performance.

How the Universe Got Its Spots
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 224

How the Universe Got Its Spots

Mixing memoir and visionary science, a leading astrophysicist’s groundbreaking personal account of her life and ideas Is the universe infinite or just really big? With this question, cosmologist Janna Levin announces the central theme of this book, which established her as one of the most direct, unorthodox, and creative voices in contemporary science. As Levin sets out to determine how big “really big” may be, she offers a rare intimate look at the daily life of an innovative physicist, complete with jet lag and the tensions between personal relationships and the extreme demands of scientific exploration. Nimbly explaining geometry, topology, chaos, and string theory, Levin shows how the pattern of hot and cold spots left over from the big bang may one day reveal the size of the cosmos. The result is a thrilling story of cosmology by one of its leading thinkers.

Reimag(in)ing the Victorians in Contemporary Art
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

Reimag(in)ing the Victorians in Contemporary Art

  • Categories: Art

From contemporary deployments of taxidermy, magic lanterns and microscopy to the visualization of forgotten lives, marginalized narratives and colonial histories, this book explores how the work of artists including Mat Collishaw, Yinka Shonibare, Tessa Farmer, Mark Dion, Dorothy Cross and Ingrid Pollard reimag(in)es the Victorians in the ‘present’. Examining how recent paintings, sculptures, photographs, installations and films revisit and re-present nineteenth-century technologies, practices and events, the book’s rich interdisciplinary approach applies literary, media and linguistic theories to its analysis of visual art, alongside in-depth discussions of the Victorian inventions, c...

Wonder in Contemporary Artistic Practice
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 335

Wonder in Contemporary Artistic Practice

  • Categories: Art

Wonder has an established link to the history and philosophy of science. However, there is little acknowledgement of the relationship between the visual arts and wonder. This book presents a new perspective on this overlooked connection, allowing a unique insight into the role of wonder in contemporary visual practice. Artists, curators and art theorists give accounts of their approach to wonder through the use of materials, objects and ways of exhibiting. These accounts not only raise issues of a particular relevance to the way in which we encounter our reality today but ask to what extent artists utilize the function of wonder purposely in their work.

Cabinets for the Curious
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 320

Cabinets for the Curious

This book uses the study of early museums to cast light on modern museum philosophies. At a time when many contemporary institutions are suffering from a sense of cultural irrelevance and are increasingly looking to computer technology to attract a younge

Experiment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 374

Experiment

  • Categories: Art

Art and science. Embraced by some and dismissed by others, collaboration between these two highly divergent cultures is now a dynamic area of practice. This text showcases some of this groundbreaking activity.