Maurizio Cattelan


Book Description

You'll love, you'll love, you'll love this Dinosaur Pet! Some kids have puppies or cats. But in this entertaining new picture book and CD, a little boy cherishes something even bigger and better -- his own dinosaur! With its witty lyrics, amusing illustrations, and a catchy irresistible tune on the CD, kids will be reading, singing and dancing along. Inspired and based upon the music of Neil Sedaka's hit song 'Calendar Girl', DINOSAUR PET follows the delightful antics of this cuddly prehistoric pet as he grows and grows. Bonus: Includes a CD with 3 original songs: Dinosaur Pet, The Tooth Fairy, She Moved Away, from the creators of Over the Rainbow and Wish Upon a Star.




6th Caribbean Biennial


Book Description

Une vraie fausse biennale imaginée par Maurizio Cattelan sur le site de l'île antillaise de St. Kitts. Des artistes dans un hôtel, partagent les repas, la plage, les bains, effaçant toute trace d'art...




Toiletpaper. Ediz. Inglese


Book Description

'Toiletpaper' comprises startling photographs colliding commercial photography with twisted narrative tableaux and surrealistic imagery.




Punki


Book Description

Foto-dokumentation af performance, hvor Jolly Rotten Punk (=Bernard Wilson) hver dag i perioden 17.9.-14.10.2007 bevægede sig rundt i Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main




Maurizio Cattelan


Book Description




Realism


Book Description

Each book in Taschen's Basic Art movement and genre series includes a detailed introduction with approximately 30 photographs, plus a timeline of the most important events (political, cultural, scientific, sporting, etc.) that took place during the time period.




The Supermodel and the Brillo Box


Book Description

A look at the contemporary art market and the economics and psychology that first produced a market crash, and then two years later resulted in astronomical prices




The Perpetual Guest


Book Description

Leading art critic explores the connections between art’s past and present Contemporary art sometimes pretends to have made a clean break with history. In The Perpetual Guest, poet and critic Barry Schwabsky demonstrates that any robust understanding of art’s present must also account for the ongoing life and changing fortunes of its past. Surveying the art world of recent decades, Schwabsky attends not only to its most significant newer faces—among them, Kara Walker, Thomas Hirschhorn, Ai Weiwei, Chris Ofili, and Lorna Simpson—but their forebears as well, both near (Jeff Wall, Nancy Spero, Dan Graham, Cindy Sherman) and more distant (Velázquez, Manet, Matisse, and the portraitists of the Renaissance). Schwabsky’s rich and subtle contributions illuminate art’s present moment in all its complexity: shot through with determinations produced by centuries of interwoven traditions, but no less open-ended for it.




Seven Days in the Art World


Book Description

The art market has been booming. Museum attendance is surging. More people than ever call themselves artists. Contemporary art has become a mass entertainment, a luxury good, a job description, and, for some, a kind of alternative religion. In a series of narratives, Sarah Thornton investigates the drama of a Christie's auction, the workings in Takashi Murakami's studios, the elite at the Basel Art Fair, the eccentricities of Artforum magazine, the competition behind an important art prize, life in a notorious art-school seminar, and the wonderland of the Venice Biennale. She reveals the new dynamics of creativity, taste, status, money, and the search for meaning in life. A judicious and juicy account of the institutions that have the power to shape art history, based on hundreds of interviews with high-profile players, Thornton's entertaining ethnography will change the way you look at contemporary culture.




The Trump Effect in Contemporary Art and Visual Culture


Book Description

The 2021 Capitol Hill Riot marked a watershed moment when the 'old world' of factbased systems of representation was briefly overwhelmed by the emerging hyper-individual politics of aestheticized emotion. In The Trump Effect in Contemporary Art and Visual Culture, Kit Messham-Muir and Uroš Cvoro analyse the aesthetics that have emerged at the core of 21st-century politics, and which erupted at the US Capitol in January 2021. Looking at this event's aesthetic dimensions through such aspects as QAnon, white resentment and strongman authoritarianism, they examine the world-wide historical trends towards ethno-nationalism and populism that emerged following the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the dawning of the current post-ideological age. Building on their ground-breaking research into how trauma, emotion and empathy have become well-worn tropes in contemporary art informed by conflict, Messham-Muir and Cvoro go further by highlighting the ways in which art can actively disrupt an underlying drift in society towards white supremacism and ultranationalism. Utilising their outsiders' perspective on a so-called American phenomenon, and rejecting American exceptionalism, their theorising of the 'Trump Effect' rejects the idea of Trump as a political aberration, but as a symptom of deeper and longer-term philosophical shifts in global politics and society. As theorists of contemporary art and visual culture, Messham-Muir and Cvoro explore the ways in which these features of the Trump Effect operate through aesthetics, in the intersection of politics and contemporary art, and provide valuable insight into the current political context.