Issue 8 / Autumn 2006
Content:
- Editors' Note
- Brian Dillon on Erasure
- Vincent Katz on Robert Rauschenberg
- Dan Graham on John Martin's 'The Great Day of His Wrath'
- Ryan Gander on Fischli/Weiss
- Jan Avgikos on Fischli/Weiss
- Patrick Frey on Fischli/Weiss
- Reflections on Hans Holbein
- Christopher Turner on Jake and Dinos Chapman
- Will Self on the art of writing
- The Real St Ives Story
- Deborah Jowitt on David Smith
- Rebecca Smith on David Smith
- Candida Smith on her father David Smith
- Francis Wells, Alexa de Ferranti, Desmond Morris and Dan Hays reflect on a work in the Tate Collection
- John Burnside visits the Tate Archive
Brian Dillon on Erasure
‘Erasure is merely a matter of making things disappear: there is always some detritus strewn about in the aftermath…some reminder of the violence done to make the world look new again.’ Brian Dillon looks at undoing, from Joseph Kosuth’s Freudian wall texts, to Soviet Russia’s doctored photographs
Jan Avgikos on Fischli/Weiss
The diverse body of work created by the Fischli/Weiss collaboration ranges from polyurethane trompe l’oeil buckets to films of home-made rocket-driven vehicles. Jan Avgikos examines their New York art world presence
Reflections on Hans Holbein
To coincide with Holbein in England at Tate Britain, five contributors respond to the work of Hans Holbein. Michel Onfray, Jenny Uglow, Chuck Close, George Carey and Derek Wilson speak.


![Fischli/Weiss, Image from Untitled [Flowers], 1998](/images/cms/12551w_fishliwessflowering_flowers2.jpg)
