| ART & LANGUAGE |
On Painting
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This paper was presented by members of Art & Language (Michael Baldwin, Charles Harrison and Mel Ramsden) at Tate Modern in March 2003
as part of the talks series Painting Present.
It argues that painting resists the Institutional Theory of art in as much as it does not depend on institutions for its status as art.
In this respect, painting after conceptual art may be seen as just as critical of art institutions as conceptual art used to be. |
| Spring 2004 |
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| TANYA BARSON |
'Unland'. The Place of Testimony
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Colombian
artist Doris Salcedo (born 1958) addresses the themes of loss and bereavement
in her sculpture Unland: audible in the mouth, 1998. Focusing on
this work in Tate's collection, the paper looks at the position of witnesses
to violent events and how their testimonies are translated by Salcedo into
the formal language of sculpture. |
| Spring 2004 |
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| JENNIFER MUNDY |
An 'overflowing, a richness & poetry': Joseph Cornell's Planet Set and Giuditta Pasta
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The American artist Joseph Cornell (1903-72) is famous for his allusive box constructions. This paper examines the history of Planet Set, 1950, a work in Tate's collection that has received little critical commentary. In particular, it explores Cornell's fascination with the early nineteenth-century opera singer Giuditta Pasta, and shows how this relates to a number of other themes in his work, including stars, maps and birds. |
| Spring 2004 |
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| BLAKE STIMSON |
The Photographic
Comportment of Bernd and Hilla Becher
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Bernd and
Bernd and Hilla Becher first began their project of systematically photographing industrial structures in the late 1950s.
This paper, first given at a conference at Tate Modern, investigates the rhythmic continuity of the comportment or bearing toward the world
that they have made into an epic form and that has gained broader influence in the work of their successful students.
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| Spring 2004 |
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