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La collection « Région-poche » permet de connaître et de comprendre chacune des régions françaises. Véritable base documentaire, chaque livre présente une région (à travers ses composantes géographiques, historiques, humaines et économiques) et ses spécificités, dégageant ainsi son identité et sa vocation face à l'avenir.
Sur un mode chronologique et en ayant recours à une abondante iconographie, Prototypes 1990-2003 retrace treize années de soutien à la création et de diffusion du Fonds régional d'art contemporain de Picardie. De page en page, on revisite le dialogue permanent instauré entre un lieu, des territoires, une collection et les artistes qui y sont représentés. La topographie du projet artistique du Frac Picardie y est restituée au travers des œuvres qui l'animent, et de leur permanente itinérance. Cet ouvrage n'est pas un catalogue de collection, mais un livre sur la valeur d'usage d'une collection et la lente affirmation d'une spécificité dans le domaine du dessin contemporain.
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The Endless Theory of Days: The Art and Poetry of Gérard Titus-Carmel seeks to set forth the case for the special, multiple genius of a man who, despite the experience of a biting melancholy resulting from loss, despite an ‘indefectible feeling of estrangement from the world’, despite, too, the corrosive sense of art’s, of languages’s, deceptiveness, has never lost sight of a curious duty to the shadows that haunt and that, with now a strangeness that smiles, yet beckon toward ‘the very place, finally clarified and recognised, of pure evidence. [The place,] that is, where beauty is named’. This place, Gérard Titus-Carmel may feel, lies no doubt impossibly beyond the strict locus of his art and his writing, but it is a place he has struggled with dignity and unceasingly deployed energy to bring to a semblance of incarnation in a vast plastic and poetical oeuvre that has stirred, and will continue to stir, the minds and hearts of all those – from Derrida and Bonnefoy, Alain Robbe-Grillet and Pascal Quignard to Jacques Dupin and Marie-Claire Bancquart, and countless others – who have witnessed its exquisitely solemn unfolding over, today, more than forty years.
This interdisciplinary book investigates the various ways in which North American and European modern and contemporary artists, authors, and musicians have returned to earlier works of their own, engaging in inventive revivals and transformations of the past in the present. The book is distinctive in its focus on such revisits, as well as in the diversity of art forms under review: in addition to visual art, the book explores fiction, poetry, literary criticism, film, rock music, and philosophy. This scope, together with the time-span covered in the book, from the 1850s to the twenty-first century, allows for a broad view on retrospection and revision. The case studies presented here offer a multifaceted exploration of the widely different goals to which practitioners of the arts have made retrospection and revision functional against the background of cultural, social, political, and personal forces.