Hiding Making - Showing Creation
Title
Hiding Making - Showing Creation
Subtitle
The Studio from Turner to Tacita Dean
Price
€ 54,95 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789089645074
Format
Paperback
Number of pages
262
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Table of Contents
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Part I Introduction: Hiding Making – Showing Creation. The Afterlife of Studio Topoi in the Nineteenth Century - Sandra Kisters 1. Studio Matters: Materials, Instruments and Artistic Processes - Monika Wagner 2. Jean-Léon Gérôme, His Badger and His Studio - Matthias Krüger 3. Showing Making in Courbet’s The Painter’s Atelier - Petra ten-Doesschate Chu 4. Making and Creating: The Painted Palette in late Nineteenth-Century Dutch Painting - Terry van Druten 5. 14 rue de La Rochefoucauld. The Partial Eclipse of Gustave Moreau - Maarten Liefooghe 6. The Artist as Centerpiece. The Image of the Artist in Studio Photographs in the Nineteenth Century - Mayken Jonkman Part II Introduction: Hiding Making – Showing Creation. Forms and Functions of the Studio from the Twentieth Century to Today - Rachel Esner 7. The Studio as Mediator - Frank Reijnders 8. Accrochage in Architecture: Photographic Representations of Theo van Doesburg’s Studios and Paintings - Matthias Noell 9. Studio, Storage, Legend. The Work of Hiding: Tacita Dean’s Section Cinema (Homage to Marcel Broodthaers) - Beatrice von Bismarck 10. The Empty Studio: Bruce Nauman’s Studio Films - Eric de Bruyn 11. Home Improvement and Studio Stupor. On Gregor Schneider’s (Dead) House ur - Wouter Davidts 12. Sarah de Rijke - Staging the Studio: Enacting Artful Realities through Digital Photography Epilogue: “Good Art Theory Must Smell of the Studio.” Towards a Theory of Studio Practice - Ann-Sophie Lehmann

Reviews and Features

The essays in HIDING MAKING - SHOWING CREATION offer a wide range of highly interesting investigations upon creative processes and its dialectic between showing the practices and hiding the secrets. Oskar Bätschmann, University of Bern

Hiding Making - Showing Creation

The Studio from Turner to Tacita Dean

The artist, at least according to Honoré de Balzac, is at work when he seems to be at rest; his labor is not labor but repose. This observation provides a model for modern artists and their relationship to both their place of work-the studio-and what they do there. Examining the complex relationship between process, product, artistic identity, and the artist's studio-in all its various manifestations-the contributors to this volume consider the dichotomy between conceptual and material aspects of art production. The various essays also explore the studio as a form of inspiration, meaning, function, and medium, from the nineteenth century up to the present.
Editors

Rachel Esner

Rachel Esner is Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. She is the author of a number of articles on the artist’s studio and image of the artist in the nineteenth century, as well as co-editor of Vincent Everywhere. Van Gogh’s (Inter)National Identities (Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2010).

Sandra Kisters

Sandra Kisters is assistant professor in modern and contemporary art at the University of Utrecht.

Ann-Sophie Lehmann

Ann-Sophie Lehmann is professor for art history & material culture at the University of Groningen. Her research has a process-based, transhistorical approach and shows how materials, tools, and practices partake in the meaning making of art.