Mediascape, catalogue (1996)

14 March 2013, dusan

Catalog of an exhibition organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in association with ZKM/Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, and held at the Guggenheim Museum SoHo, June 14 – September 15, 1996.

Exhibiting artists: Ingo Guenther, Jenny Holzer, Toshio Iwai, Marie-Jo Lafontaine, Bruce Nauman, Nam June Paik, Bill Seaman, Jeffrey Shaw, Steina and Woody Vasulka, Bill Viola.

With texts by Heinrich Klotz, Ursula Frohne, Oliver Seifert, and Annicka Blunck.

Publisher Guggenheim Museum Publications, New York; with ZKM, Karlsruhe, 1996
ISBN 0892071729
68 pages
via Archive.org

google books

PDF (no OCR)

Katarína Rusnáková (ed.): V toku pohyblivých obrazov: Antológia textov o elektronickom a digitálnom umení v kontexte vizuálnej kultúry (2005) [Slovak]

26 October 2012, dusan

Antológia textov o elektronickom a digitálnom umení v kontexte vizuálnej kultúry prináša aktuálne pohľady na mnohotvárnu problematiku súčasného elektronického a digitálneho umenia.

Autori textov: Nora Barry, Tilman Baumgärtel, Ursula Frohne, Sabine Himmelsbach, Verena Kuni, Peter Lunenfeld, Lev Manovich, Simon Penny, Peter Weibel.

Publisher Academy of Fine Arts, Bratislava, 2005
ISBN 8088675979, 9788088675976
193 pages

Publisher

PDF (no OCR)

Bruce Nauman: Please Pay Attention Please: Bruce Nauman’s Words: Writings and Interviews (2003)

7 October 2012, dusan

Since the 1960s, the artist Bruce Nauman has developed a highly complex and pluralistic oeuvre ranging from discrete sculpture, performance, film, video, and text-based works to elaborate multipart installations incorporating sound, video recording and monitors, and architectural structures. Nauman’s work is often interpreted in terms of movements and mediums, including performance, postminimalism, process, and conceptual art, thereby emphasizing its apparent eclecticism. But what is often overlooked is that underlying these seemingly disparate artistic tendencies are conceptual continuities, one of which is an investigation of the nature of language.

Unlike many of his contemporaries, Nauman has refrained from participating in the critical discourse surrounding his own work. He has given relatively few interviews over the course of his career and has little to do with the art press or critical establishment. Indeed, he granted Janet Kraynak and The MIT Press almost complete autonomy in the preparation of this volume. In contrast to Nauman?s reputation for silence, however, from the beginning of his career, the incorporation of language has been a central feature of his art. This collection takes as its starting point the seeming paradox of an artist of so few words who produces an art of so many words.

Please Pay Attention Please contains all of Nauman’s major interviews from 1965 to 2001, as well as a comprehensive body of his writings, including instructions and proposal texts, dialogues transcribed from audio-video works, and prose texts written specifically for installation sculptures. Where relevant, the texts are accompanied by illustrations of the artworks for which they were composed. In the critical essay that serves as the book’s introduction, the editor investigates Nauman’s art in relation to the linguistic turn in art practices of the 1960s—understanding language through the speech act—and its legacy in contemporary art.

Edited by Janet Kraynak
Publisher MIT Press, 2003
Writing Art series
ISBN 0262140829, 9780262140829
426 pages

publisher
google books

PDF