nouvelles

Browse our latest catalogue
Browse our latest catalogue
New distributed publishers
INSCRIPTION NEWSLETTER
Les nouvelles dans votre boîte mail

JAAR > 2018
01-new
Bient?t
Nouveautés en Papeterie
Nouveautés Livres d'enfants
Bestseller
Expo
Expo
Last copies
Promo
Réimpression
Coups de coeur
Pas annoncé
9788836641307 9788836641307_01
Pages intérieures

John Chamberlain

Bending Spaces

ISBN: 9788836641307 (PB - E/ G)

The crumpled sculptures by American artist John Chamberlain, welded together from deformed car body parts, revolutionized the art world back in the 1950s. Through the unusual use of industrially prefabricated materials and their completely free repurposing, he released new processes of artistic forms and a consumer-oriented aesthetic. At first assigned to Nouveau Réalisme, his work at the same time evinces relationships with Abstract Realism and Minimal Art, but ultimately asserts a great measure of autonomy in its form of expression. As early as the mid-1950s, he turned to the industrial scrap from cars, which he squashed, pressed into shape and welded together. Just as important as the form is the interplay of colours which make his works dazzle and sometimes bring them into a certain proximity with colour-happy Pop Art. In addition to his internationally renowned sculptural work, Chamberlain occupied himself intensively with photography, a theme extensively addressed in this book. Sculpture and photography interact directly with each other. Unlike the sculptures, which are positioned in their materiality, Chamberlain's photographs are marked by great blurring and fleetingness. At the same time, they absorb the element of movement in space. Chamberlain himself put it in terms of 'bending space'. One may think of them, even more readily than of his sculptures, as the spontaneous gestural structures of Abstract Expressionist paintings.



Éditions disponibles:
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi:

Share
Nom
Email

Produit ajouté à votre panier

Ajouté à ma liste d'envies

Les changements ont été enregistrés