Tracey Warr (ed.): The Artist’s Body (2000)

4 February 2014, dusan

“Beginning with such key artists as Marcel Duchamp and Jackson Pollock, this book examines a selection of the most significant players who have used their bodies to create their art – among them, in the 1960s Carolee Scheemann, Rudolf Schwarzkogler, Yoko Ono; in the 1970s, Chris Burden, Ana Mendieta, Vito Acconci, Marina Abramovic; up to the turn of the millennium, Matthew Barney, Marc Quinn, Tracey Emin and Mona Hatoum.

Survey. Amelia Jones, among the world experts in the field, discusses performance and body art against the background of social history. She examines the breakdown of barriers between art and life, visual and sensual experience – how artists have expanded and renewed the age-old tradition of self-portraiture, moving art out of the gallery into unexpected spaces and media.

Works. Each image is accompanied by an extended caption. The book is organized thematically:
“Painting Bodies”, concerns work that shows the trace, stain or imprint of the artist’s body in response to the paint-on-canvas tradition.
“Gesturing Bodies”, examines artists who transform the body – its acts, its gesture – into art; gesture, behaviour and situations are used in place of art objects.
“Ritualistic and Transgressive Bodies”, looks at work which uses the body to enact challenges to the social expecations of the body, often in rituals that perform a cathartic function. Mutilation and sacrifice are used to rupture personal and social homogeneity.
“Body Boundaries”, examines boundaries between the individual body and the social environment and between the inside and outside of the body itself.
“Performing Identity”, looks at issues of representation and identity.
“Absent Bodies”, explores absence and the mortality of the body through photography, casting, imprints or remnants of the body.
In “Extended and Prosthetic Bodies”, the body is extended through prosthetics or technology, to explore cyberspace and alternative states of consciousness.

Documents. Parallel to the illustrated works of art, this section combines texts by critics who shaped the movement, from Lucy R. Lippard to Thomas McEvilley. Alongside these are writings by philosophers and thinkers such as George Bataille and Gilles Deleuze who have contributed on a theoretical level to the discussion around the body – a prevalent theme in twentieth-century cultural theory.”

Edited by Tracey Warr, with a survey by Amelia Jones
Publisher Phaidon Press, London, 2000
ISBN 0714835021, 9780714835020
304 pages

Reviews: James Hall (London Review of Books, 2001), Barry Gewen (NYT, 2005).

Publisher

PDF (section Works pp 48-189 missing, 52 MB, no OCR, updated on 2022-8-30)


5 Responses to “Tracey Warr (ed.): The Artist’s Body (2000)”

  1. FDM on May 13, 2017 10:20 am

    Hi Dusan, the file’s not there anymore. Any possibility this might be updated? Many thanks.

  2. dusan on May 13, 2017 11:06 am

    done

  3. FDM on May 15, 2017 2:54 pm

    Thank you!!

  4. Emmanuel C on August 30, 2022 11:47 am

    The pdf is not working. Would it be possible to put it back? Thanks! I can’t seem to find a paper copy.

  5. dusan on August 30, 2022 9:07 pm

    updated

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

Speak your mind