Difference between revisions of "Ulises Carrión"

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[[Image:Carrion_Ulises_Second_Thoughts.jpg|thumb|258px|''Second Thoughts'', 1980, [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=14521 Log], [[Media:Carrion_Ulises_Second_Thoughts.pdf|PDF]], [http://lomholtmailartarchive.dk/mail-art-network/1980-00-00-carrion JPGs].]]
 
[[Image:Carrion_Ulises_Second_Thoughts.jpg|thumb|258px|''Second Thoughts'', 1980, [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=14521 Log], [[Media:Carrion_Ulises_Second_Thoughts.pdf|PDF]], [http://lomholtmailartarchive.dk/mail-art-network/1980-00-00-carrion JPGs].]]
 
A key figure in Mexican conceptual art, '''Ulises Carrión''' (1941, San Andrés Tuxtla, Mexico – 1989, Amsterdam) was an artist, editor, curator, and theorist of the post-1960s international artistic avant-garde.
 
A key figure in Mexican conceptual art, '''Ulises Carrión''' (1941, San Andrés Tuxtla, Mexico – 1989, Amsterdam) was an artist, editor, curator, and theorist of the post-1960s international artistic avant-garde.
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{{TOC limit|3}}
  
 
He studied philosophy and literature in Mexico City, Paris and Leeds, and lived in Amsterdam from 1970 until the end of his life. His art has been exhibited in various locations in The Netherlands, Mexico and elsewhere. Carriónwas the author of several books and in 1975 founded Other Books and So, a distribution centre for artists' publications and multiples. Carrion arrived at visual art practice through his interest in print culture and media, which led him to engage with mail art and eventually performance, film and video. He was closely involved with the In-Out Center, an alternative Amsterdam gallery which drew artists of diverse cultural backgrounds, whose work in some way commented on Dutch art and society from their own cultural perspective. The continuation of his engagement with literary formats can be seen in the videos' examinations of the strategies and devices used to create narrative structure in a film, story or artwork. [http://www.li-ma.nl/site/catalogue/agent/ulises-carrion/19 (Source)]
 
He studied philosophy and literature in Mexico City, Paris and Leeds, and lived in Amsterdam from 1970 until the end of his life. His art has been exhibited in various locations in The Netherlands, Mexico and elsewhere. Carriónwas the author of several books and in 1975 founded Other Books and So, a distribution centre for artists' publications and multiples. Carrion arrived at visual art practice through his interest in print culture and media, which led him to engage with mail art and eventually performance, film and video. He was closely involved with the In-Out Center, an alternative Amsterdam gallery which drew artists of diverse cultural backgrounds, whose work in some way commented on Dutch art and society from their own cultural perspective. The continuation of his engagement with literary formats can be seen in the videos' examinations of the strategies and devices used to create narrative structure in a film, story or artwork. [http://www.li-ma.nl/site/catalogue/agent/ulises-carrion/19 (Source)]
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* Gerrit Jan de Rook, [http://web.archive.org/web/20160612071124/http://metropolism.com/magazine/2010-no5/tatata-tatatata-ta/english "Ulises Carrión and Other Books and So"], trans. Mari Shields, ''Metropolis M'' 5 (Oct-Nov 2010). {{en}}
 
* Gerrit Jan de Rook, [http://web.archive.org/web/20160612071124/http://metropolism.com/magazine/2010-no5/tatata-tatatata-ta/english "Ulises Carrión and Other Books and So"], trans. Mari Shields, ''Metropolis M'' 5 (Oct-Nov 2010). {{en}}
 
* Mónica de la Torre, [http://bombmagazine.org/article/6931/ulises-carri-n-s-the-poet-s-tongue "Ulises Carrión's The Poet's Tongue"], ''BOMB'' 122 (Winter 2013). {{en}}
 
* Mónica de la Torre, [http://bombmagazine.org/article/6931/ulises-carri-n-s-the-poet-s-tongue "Ulises Carrión's The Poet's Tongue"], ''BOMB'' 122 (Winter 2013). {{en}}
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==Exhibitions==
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* [http://www.museodeartecarrillogil.com/exposiciones/exposiciones-anteriores/mundos-personales-o-estrategias-culturales Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil, Mexico City], 2002.
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* [http://www.theshowroom.org/programme.html?id=589,595 Show Room, London], 2010.
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* [http://www.museoreinasofia.es/en/exhibitions/ulises-carrion Reina Sofia, Madrid], 2016. [http://www.museoreinasofia.es/en/activities/new-art-making-books Seminar].
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
* [http://www.archivolafuente.com/en/fondos-y-conjuntos/fondo-ulises-carrion Ulises Carrión Fonds at Archivo Lafuente]
 
* [http://www.archivolafuente.com/en/fondos-y-conjuntos/fondo-ulises-carrion Ulises Carrión Fonds at Archivo Lafuente]
 
* [http://mailartists.wordpress.com/2011/01/30/ulises-carrion/ Carrión at Mail Artists Index]
 
* [http://mailartists.wordpress.com/2011/01/30/ulises-carrion/ Carrión at Mail Artists Index]
* [http://www.theshowroom.org/programme.html?id=589,595 Exhibition at Show Room, London], 2010.
 
* [http://www.museoreinasofia.es/en/exhibitions/ulises-carrion Exhibition at Reina Sofia, Madrid], 2016. [http://www.museoreinasofia.es/en/activities/new-art-making-books Seminar].
 
 
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulises_Carri%C3%B3n Carrión on Wikipedia]
 
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulises_Carri%C3%B3n Carrión on Wikipedia]
 
* https://www.facebook.com/UlisesCarrion/
 
* https://www.facebook.com/UlisesCarrion/
  
 
[[Category:Artists' books]] [[Category:Mail art]] [[Category:Conceptual art]] {{DEFAULTSORT:Carrion, Ulises}}
 
[[Category:Artists' books]] [[Category:Mail art]] [[Category:Conceptual art]] {{DEFAULTSORT:Carrion, Ulises}}

Revision as of 01:06, 17 November 2016

Second Thoughts, 1980, Log, PDF, JPGs.

A key figure in Mexican conceptual art, Ulises Carrión (1941, San Andrés Tuxtla, Mexico – 1989, Amsterdam) was an artist, editor, curator, and theorist of the post-1960s international artistic avant-garde.

He studied philosophy and literature in Mexico City, Paris and Leeds, and lived in Amsterdam from 1970 until the end of his life. His art has been exhibited in various locations in The Netherlands, Mexico and elsewhere. Carriónwas the author of several books and in 1975 founded Other Books and So, a distribution centre for artists' publications and multiples. Carrion arrived at visual art practice through his interest in print culture and media, which led him to engage with mail art and eventually performance, film and video. He was closely involved with the In-Out Center, an alternative Amsterdam gallery which drew artists of diverse cultural backgrounds, whose work in some way commented on Dutch art and society from their own cultural perspective. The continuation of his engagement with literary formats can be seen in the videos' examinations of the strategies and devices used to create narrative structure in a film, story or artwork. (Source)

Works

Catalogues

  • Ulises Carrion: We have won! Haven’t we?, ed. Guy Schraenen, Amsterdam: Fodor Museum, 1992.
  • Dear Reader. Don't Read., ed. Guy Schraenen, Madrid: Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, 2016, 272 pp. [1]

Literature

Exhibitions

Links