Jacques Rancière: Aisthesis: Scenes from the Aesthetic Regime of Art (2011/2013)

24 November 2013, dusan

Rancière’s magnum opus on the aesthetic.

“Composed in a series of scenes, Aisthesis–Rancière’s definitive statement on the aesthetic–takes its reader from Dresden in 1764 to New York in 1941. Along the way, we view the Belvedere Torso with Winckelmann, accompany Hegel to the museum and Mallarmé to the Folies-Bergère, attend a lecture by Emerson, visit exhibitions in Paris and New York, factories in Berlin, and film sets in Moscow and Hollywood. Rancière uses these sites and events—some famous, others forgotten—to ask what becomes art and what comes of it. He shows how a regime of artistic perception and interpretation was constituted and transformed by erasing the specificities of the different arts, as well as the borders that separated them from ordinary experience. This incisive study provides a history of artistic modernity far removed from the conventional postures of modernism.”

First published as Aisthesis : Scènes du régime esthétique de l’art, Éditions Galilée, 2011

Translated by Zakir Paul
Publisher Verso Books, 2013
ISBN 1781680892, 9781781680896
304 pages
via falsedeity

Reviews: Hal Foster (London Review of Books), Joseph Tanke (Los Angeles Review of Books), Marc Farrant (The New Inquiry), Ali Alizadeh (Sydney Review of Books), Jean-Philippe Deranty (Parrhesia).
Roundtable discussion with Rancière at Columbia (video, 43 min)
Selected interviews and reviews (in French)

Publisher

PDF

Joan Retallack: The Poethical Wager (2003)

29 April 2013, dusan

In these highly inventive essays, Joan Retallack, acclaimed poet and essayist, conveys her unique post-utopian vision as she explores the relationship between art and life in today’s chaotic world. In the tradition of the essay as complex humanist exploration, she engages ideas from across history: Aristotle’s definition of happiness, Epicurus’s swerve into unpredictable possibility, Montaigne’s essays as an instrument of self-invention, John Cage’s redefinition of Silence. Within her unifying rubric of poethics, Retallack gives the reader plenty of surprises with a wonderful range of examples, situations, and texts through which she conducts her exploration. A computer glitch, a passage from Gertrude Stein’s favorite detective novelist, the idea of the experimental feminine, a John Cage performance—all serve as occasions for inquiry and speculation on the way to her poethics of a “complex realism.”

Publisher University of California Press, 2003
ISBN 0520218418, 9780520218413
279 pages

publisher
google books

PDF (updated on 2014-4-3)
View online (HTML, added on 2014-4-3)

FIT: Festival intermediálnej tvorby, catalogue (1991) [Slovak]

11 November 2012, dusan

A catalogue for an intermedia art festival organised by The Society for Non-conventional Music (SNEH) in Bratislava on 4-10 March 1991.

Featured artists: Milan Adamčiak, László Cselényi, Balvan Theatre, Daniel Aschwanden, Dada Soiré, Dama Dama, Stano Filko, Dušan Hanák, Viktor Hulík, Milan Knížák, Werner Kodytek, Ladislav Novák, Štěpán Pala, Nová vážnosť, Michal Kern, Dezider Tóth, Juraj Bartusz, Jozef Juhász, Čenkovej deti, Jozef Juhász, Blaho Uhlár Theatre, Transmusic comp. Tibor Szemző, Vitebsk Broken, Alan Vitouš, A Dato

Editor Milan Adamčiak
via muzika-komunika.blogspot.com

FIT on Monoskop wiki

PDF (no OCR)