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Holding Our Nerves—Experiments in Dispersed Collective Silence, Waking Sleep and Autotheoretical Confession Arts Pub Date : 2022-08-05 Grace Denton
As part of my practice-based research, I host a monthly radio show based on the principle of ‘waking sleep’, resulting in a largely silent experiment in dispersed communion with an audience. Silence—though frowned upon in standard broadcasting—has long been a feature of artworks from Marina Abramović (1973–present), to John Cage’s 4′33 (1952), to Gillian Wearing’s Sixty MinutesSilence (1996). The power
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After the Wave, the Flood? Finding a New Autonomy and Relation to Work Arts Pub Date : 2022-08-02 Kristof van Baarle
How do changes in the perception of the arts stemming from activism, government policies, precarity and the ongoing crises unfolding in the world affect the autonomy of the artist? In this article, I analyse three cases of young and emerging theatre makers in Flanders and Brussels that each deal with the economic, social precarity of the arts, as well as the general precarious state of the world. Camping
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Embroidering the Life of Thomas Becket during the Middle Ages: Cult and Devotion in Liturgical Vestments Arts Pub Date : 2022-07-27 Nathalie Le Luel
From the early studies of Tancred Borenius (1885–1948) to the present, the iconography of the archbishop Thomas Becket has drawn attention among scholars. Numerous studies have been published on the representation of Becket’s martyrdom in mural painting, sculpture, and reliquary caskets. Despite this attention, many questions concerning the selection of episodes embroidered in liturgical vestments
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Introduction: The Art of Adaptation in Film and Video Games Arts Pub Date : 2022-07-11 Christian Thomas
We live in a world of adaptation, and a failure to study that world means we must ignore an increasingly important part of contemporary culture [...]
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Physical and Metaphysical Visualities: Vasily Rozanov and Historical Artefacts Arts Pub Date : 2022-07-06 Henrietta Mondry
In Russian modernism, the work of writer Vasily Rozanov (1856–1919) presents an understudied case of constructing a worldview based on the study of the parallel history of human physicality and artefacts, which he articulated within the framework of the physical and metaphysical. I argue that Rozanov widened the domain of what was viewed as “compelling visuality” at his time, in line with the subjective
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A Son of Nikon or Nikon Victorious: A New Inscription on a Fragment of a Pseudo Panathenaic Amphora Arts Pub Date : 2022-07-05 Thomas Mannack
Recently, an inscribed fragment of a closed vase made of buff pinkish clay, covered with a red-orange wash, 11.8 cm wide and 8.4 cm high, and decorated with black, lustrous clay-paint surfaced briefly on the Swiss art market. It preserves a small section of the black tongue pattern on the shoulder and a wide black strip separating ornament and a panel with a straight glossy black line angled upwards;
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Can There Be Such a Thing as a Sociology of Works of Art and Literary Texts? A Very French Epistemological Debate Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-30 Clara Lévy, Alain Quemin
Is it possible to undertake a sociological analysis of works of art? This article considers the arguments for both the negative and positive answers to this question that emerged in France in a vivid manner at the turn of the millennium. It examines the main arguments exchanged by the supporters and detractors of this sub-discipline of the sociology of art, notably those relating to the problem of
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Landscape Projection and Its Technological Use in Conceptualising Places and Architecture Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-27 Renata Jóźwik, Anna Jóźwik
The manipulation of landscape and the technological use of its views can be a strategy for place-making and a way of creating architecture and making it original. The methods used for this can be different, for example, by mechanically revealing and obscuring views, optical or film projection, directing the viewer to specific frames, using mirrors, etc. This approach is alternative and somewhat in
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Determinants of the Price Paid at Auctions of Contemporary Art for Artworks by Twelve Artists Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-20 Mike Bowman
The use of regression modelling to understand how characteristics of artworks, of artists, and of the circumstances of sale affect the price paid at auction is well-established among cultural economists. Drawing on auction sales data provided by Artprice (accessed on 20 March 2022) I use regression modelling to investigate the determinants of the price paid for artworks by twelve artists at auctions
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1905 and Art: From Aesthetes to Revolutionaries Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-15 Christina Lodder
This article examines the impact that the experience of the 1905 Revolution had on the political attitudes of professional artists of various creative persuasions and on the younger generation who were still attending art schools. It inevitably focuses on a few representatives and argues that Realists as well as more innovative artists like Valentin Serov and the World of Art group became critical
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The Waiting-Servant Motif in a Late Antique Textile in Chicago: Iconography, Visuality, and Materiality Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-14 Katharine A. Raff
This article explores the use and adaptation of the iconographic motif of the waiting servant, known primarily from late Roman wall paintings, mosaics, and other media, within the sphere of Late Antique furnishing textiles. Taking as a case study a fifth- to sixth-century CE hanging in the Art Institute of Chicago’s collection, the first section argues that the addition of elaborate, multihued architectural
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Perspective Studies on Perugino's and Raffaello's Painted Architecture Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-13 Fabio Colonnese
The architecture that the Renaissance artists depicted in their works constitutes a vast reservoir of formal solutions that influenced (and were reciprocally influenced by) built architecture. Generally painted according to a rigorous perspective structure, most painted architecture can be restituted and modelled to become part of the Virtual Heritage that develops and extends its knowledge to a wider
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Visual Art and Propaganda Ecologies in the Basque Country: A Sample of Guernica Motifs from the Benedictine Sticker Archives (1978–1989) Arts Pub Date : 2022-06-08 Iker Arranz Otaegui, Kevin C. Moore
The Benedictine Archives at Lazkao contain a multitude of propaganda stickers and related visual media that provide a snapshot of the Basque region’s artful political culture in the 1970s and 1980s. Some of the most compelling examples include several items that remix Pablo Picasso’s Guernica, referencing the famous antiwar painting to become a form of mass-circulated pastiche. This move was somewhat
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The Art and Architecture of Victor Bohm (1900–1981) Arts Pub Date : 2022-05-19 Éva Lovra
The art and architecture of modernist architect and architectural theorist Victor Bohm (Bőhm Viktor, Böhm Viktor) are rare examples of modernism. At the same time, they were unusual for a provincial city—Miskolc (Hungary)—far from the modernist hub Budapest. Bohm worked in Miskolc during the 1930s, created numerous extraordinary buildings and shaped the skyline of this industrial town. He emigrated
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From Lugano to Krakow: The Career of Giovanni Battista Trevano as a Royal Architect at the Vasa Court in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Arts Pub Date : 2022-05-11 Piotr Józef Janowski
Throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, many builders, artists, and architects living on the shores of Italian lakes decided to settle in Poland. Upon arrival, they pursued brilliant careers in various areas of life. Over time, they became Polonized. This was also the case for Giovanni Battista Trevano, who was active in Krakow in the first half of the 17th century and whose lifetime achievement was
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Tracing the Oval—Characterisation and Construction of Original Danish Eighteenth-Century Strainers from Portraits by Jens Juel Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-27 Tine Louise Slotsgaard
Few examples of original strainers for paintings from the eighteenth century or earlier still exist as they have commonly been replaced due to their often-weak construction and inability to expand. Several original strainers, however, are still present in paintings by Danish portrait painter Jens Juel (1745–1802). These preserved strainers provide rare evidence of shape, construction, availability
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The Art of Southern Arabian Daggers: An Emblem of Pride Masculinity and Identity Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Khadeeja Althagafi
The long-held tradition of wearing daggers in southern Arabia is in decline. This research examines the rich history of the southern Arabian dagger, outlining its story over time, craftsmanship, and changing use, from a weapon to a ceremonial piece. A significant contribution in the field of visual art is offered, firstly by demonstrating the beauty of this metal artwork form, and secondly by examining
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The Minóy Machine Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Joseph Nechvatal
The author provides a first-hand account, as a founding editor of Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine and contributing writer with Punctum Press, of his discovery of the early noise music of Minóy (pseudonym of the sound artist Stanley Keith Bowsza), and its significance within the history of Machine Art.
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“Wings of Freedom”: Petr Miturich and Aero-Constructivism Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-20 John E. Bowlt
The article focuses on the aerodynamic experiments of Petr Vasil’evich Miturich (1887–1956), in particular his so-called letun, a project comparable to Vladimir Tatlin’s Letatlin, but less familiar. Miturich became interested in flight during the First World War, elaborating his first flying apparatus in 1918 before constructing a prototype and undertaking a test flight on 27 December 1921—which might
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A Tale of Three Domes: The Un-Realized cupola of St Ignatius of Loyola in Roma Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-07 Marco Spada
The church of St Ignatius of Loyola in Rome, together with the Church of the Gesù, represents the most significant artistic contribution of the Jesuits in the Eternal City. Incorporated in the broader context of the Roman College, and built between 1626 and 1650 following a project by Padre (Father) Orazio Grassi S.J., it is the only one of the great Roman churches without a dome. The projects for
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‘An Element of Perfection’: The Transductive Art of Robert Mallary Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Catherine Mason
In 1969, American artist Robert Mallary (1917–1997) coined the term ‘transductive art’ to describe an approach to art based on the notion of receiving energy from one system and retransmitting it, often in a different form, to another. Long before the realm of techno-art became a recognizable construct, Mallary was interested in a system of relationships, seeking in his words, ‘an element of perfection’
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‘The Lucky Country’: How the COVID-19 Pandemic Revitalised Australia’s Lethargic Art Market Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Anita Archer, David M. Challis
Since its publication in 1964, Australians have used the title of Donald Horne’s book, The Lucky Country, as a term of self-reflective endearment to express the social and economic benefits afforded to the population by the country’s wealth of geographical and environmental advantages. These same advantages, combined with strict border closures, have proven invaluable in protecting Australia from the
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Le Corbusier’s Ineffable Space and Synchronism: From Architecture as Clear Syntax to Architecture as Succession of Events Arts Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Marianna Charitonidou
This article examines Le Corbusier’s architectural design processes, paying special attention to his concept of “ineffable space”. Le Corbusier related “ineffable space” to mathematics, arguing that both mathematics and the phenomenon of “ineffable space” provoke an effect of “concordance”. He also argued that when the establishment of relations is “precise” and “overwhelming”, architectural artefacts
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Crypto-Preservation and the Ghost of Andy Warhol Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-31 Jon Ippolito
For its enthusiasts, the blockchain is an archivist’s dream come true: an immutable historical record that is publicly accessible and immune from censorship. Distributed file systems such as IPFS aim to store creative works in a redundant, networked fashion outside the control of any single cloud provider. Projects designed to work with blockchains such as Filecoin and Arweave propose a dedicated cryptocurrency
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Becoming a Part of the Houyhnhnm’s Environment Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-25 Reiko Goto Collins, Tim Collins
R. Goto Collins and T. Collins are environmental artists. Their goal is to challenge their own subjectivity through research and practice. Reiko’s interest in relational and collaborative artwork with the more-than-human world goes back to the 1980s. In 2014, she decided to engage a horse (Darkness) as a collaborative partner, with Tim’s support. In this article, the reader will find a reflection on
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Antonio Gisbert’s Monument to Spanish Liberty: The Production of the Execution of Torrijos and his Companions on the Beach at Málaga (1888) Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-10 Ann Murray
The monumental state-commissioned Execution of Torrijos and his Companions on the Beach at Málaga by Antonio Gisbert Pérez has only recently begun to receive earnest scholarly attention in Spanish-language literature after decades of relative obscurity, with no known lengthy discussion in English. Yet, it is a major Spanish history painting, commissioned as a monument to Spanish nation building in
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Camille Bryen Avant-Gardist/Abhumanist: A Reappraisal of an Artist Who Called Himself the “Best-Known of the Unknown” Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Iveta Slavkova
French artist and poet Camille Bryen (1907–1977) is usually, and always very briefly, cited as a member of the post-Second World War (1939–1945) lyrical abstraction trend in Paris, often designated as Ecole de Paris or Nouvelle Ecole de Paris, Tachisme, or Informel. Bryen painted hybrids of plants, animals, rocks, and humans, mixing the organic with the inorganic, evoking cellular agglomerations, geological
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Grain Architecture in Bourbon New Spain: On the Design of Guadalajara and Querétaro’s Alhóndigas Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-07 Luis Gordo Peláez
During the late colonial period, numerous Novohispanic cities embarked on an unprecedented number of projects aimed at reshaping their urban spaces and improving infrastructures, including new facilities for grain storage and supply. The construction of alhóndigas (public granaries), along with other public works and infrastructures, was further propelled by the implementation of Bourbon reforms in
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Between Queen Esther and Marie-Antoinette: Courtly Influence on an Esther Scroll in the Braginsky Collection Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-04 Sara Offenberg
There is an Esther scroll in the Braginsky manuscript collection (Braginsky Collection Megillah 7) that was produced in Alsace in the second half of the eighteenth century. The manuscript has not yet caught the attention of scholars, and I would like to shed some light on its artistic design in the context of French noble society. Although its illustrations appear naïve, they are typical of other Esther
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The Edge of Heaven: Revelations 12:7-9 and the Fall of the Rebel Angels in Anglo-Norman Apocalypse Illustration Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-04 Edina Eszenyi
The article examines the War in Heaven scene depicting the Fall of the Rebel Angels in the 1200s Anglo-Norman group of illustrated Apocalypse manuscripts, key in the development of Apocalypse illustration as far as quality, quantity, and art historical heritage are concerned. The iconography of the crucial War in Heaven scene shows a variety in the manuscript group; the compositions, divided into three
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Global Art Collectives and Exhibition Making Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-01 John Zarobell
Art collectives come into existence for many reasons, whether to collaborate on art making or to generate a space for contemporary art outside of the established channels of exhibition and the art market. These efforts have been captured in recent exhibitions such as The Ungovernables, organized by the New Museum in 2012; Six Lines of Flight, which was launched at SFMOMA in 2013; and Cosmopolis I,
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Channelling the Unknown: Noise in Art Ecosystems Arts Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Paul Goodfellow
At both the individual and societal levels, we are entangled within environmental, social, and technological systems that shape our material and emotional states. Contemporary art needs to integrate and challenge the information circulating within these interacting systems to address our increasingly complex lifeworld. This systemic understanding emerged in the 1960s as part of a broader growth in
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“Alpha Females”: Feminist Transgressions in Industrial Music Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-24 Nicolas Ballet
Recycled, re-engineered and transformed pornography has often been appropriated by many of the industrial music movement’s female personalities who are invested in an anti-censorship discourse. This contrasts with the dominant form of feminism in the 1970s, which railed against the depiction of all aspects of sexuality. Artists Cosey Fanni Tutti, Lisa Carver, Diamanda Galás, Mïrka Lugosi, Antal Nemeth
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Quatre Peintres Belges au Travail: Paul Haesaerts’s Film on Edgar Tytgat, Albert Dasnoy, Jean Brusselmans and Paul Delvaux (1952) Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-18 Joséphine Vandekerckhove
Belgian art historian and filmmaker Paul Haesaerts (1901–1974) made a significant contribution to the promotion of modern Flemish art. In the late 1940s, he started experimenting with the medium of film to practice a new form of lens-based art criticism. The understudied documentary Quatre peintres belges au travail (1952) presents Belgian artists Edgar Tytgat, Albert Dasnoy, Jean Brusselmans and Paul
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Art and Place: Crossing Borders in the Work of Perejaume Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-15 Deborah Schultz
In a sequence of drawings from the mid-1990s, the Catalan artist Perejaume (b. 1957) visualizes the migration of art movements across geographical and political borders. In doing so, the artist offers visual forms for intangible journeys through time and space. In sharp contrast to earlier concepts of the development of art, from Vasari’s cyclical model of rise and fall to Alfred H. Barr’s linear ‘Development
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What Approach to Flemish Annunciations? Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-11 Thor-Oona Pignarre-Altermatt
Through a series of case studies, this paper examines Flemish fifteenth and early sixteenth century paintings of the Annunciation in a domestic setting as an example of how the materiality and the spiritual dimension form two inseparable aspects of devotional practice. After questioning whether these paintings reflect contemporary interiors and practices of domestic devotion, the paper discusses their
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The Embodiment of Artistic Objects in Pablo Picasso’s Cubism Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Enrique Mallen
According to Michael Tucker, the breakdown of consciousness in modern art, a breakdown that carries the modern artist backwards to an all-embracing participation with the world, leads to a return to archaic qualities of participation mystique that involves constructive, creative elements of a new vision of reality. This may be observed in Pablo Picasso, who wanted with the help of primitive vision
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Acknowledgment to Reviewers of Arts in 2021 Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Arts Editorial Office
Note: In lieu of an abstract, this is an excerpt from the first page. Rigorous peer-reviews are the basis of high-quality academic publishing [...]
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Hedgehogs and Hedgehog-Head Boats in Ancient Egyptian Religion in the Late 3rd Millennium BCE Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Julia Clare Francis Hamilton
Hedgehogs held a special place in ancient Egyptian life like many other desert- and marsh-dwelling animals. Their natural defensive qualities were admired by ancient Egyptians and their bodily parts, notably their hardened spines, were used as ingredients in medico-magical prescriptions. In tomb reliefs of the late 3rd Millennium BCE, hedgehogs are represented being carried alive by offering bearers
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Color in Medieval Castle Architecture in Present-Day Poland and Czech Republic Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Dagmara Adamska, Przemysław Nocuń, Tomasz Ratajczak, František Záruba
Colors were ubiquitous in the medieval world, and castles were no exception. While in the eyes of most people their rich color schemes manifested power and wealth, some could also read the more nuanced messages these colors conveyed. The main objective of this paper is to discuss the use and role of color in the interiors of castles of medieval Bohemia and Poland. The picture is complemented by the
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Color of Tenement Houses Built in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries in Wroclaw (Poland)—Research, Restoration and Conservation Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-07 Przemyslaw Nowakowski
The article presents an analysis of the color evolution of tenement houses in Wroclaw in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Their various colors, confirmed by research, prove the term “Colorful Wroclaw”, appearing in the 1930s the architectural journals. The considerations were supported, i.e., by iconographic material presenting the varied colors of renovated tenement houses in Wroclaw. The aim of
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Architecture and Contemporary Visual Culture, the Image of Realism and the Realism of Image Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Iñaki Bergera, Javier de Esteban
The rise of visual culture and the role of images in shaping contemporary thought and global society has been a constant since the end of the last century. Called “Iconic turn” in the field of philosophy of perception and image theory, this process has captured increasing attention in diverse academic fields, even in disciplines such as architecture where the role of images has not always been well
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Sgraffito as a Method of Wall Decoration in the Renaissance and Mannerist Silesia Arts Pub Date : 2022-02-03 Marzanna Jagiełło
During the Renaissance and Mannerist periods, in most European countries the fashion for decorating walls with sgraffiti covered a large part of continent, from Portugal to Romania, and from Central Italy to the German countries and Poland. Its popularity in the middle part of Europe peaked in the 16th and 17th centuries. In many regions, sgraffito was the dominant method of decorating buildings. Sgraffito
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When the Sky Is Low and Heavy: David Lamelas and Transnational Heritage in Flanders Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-26 Elize Mazadiego, Stefaan Vervoort
In 1992, artist David Lamelas installed Quand le ciel bas et lourd at the temporary exhibition America: Bride of the Sun—500 Years of Latin-America and the Low Countries at the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp (KMSKA), a show that explored the cultural, economic, and political exploitation of indigenous America by European forces, and its project of colonization and erasure. Lamelas’ work remained
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Usological Turn in Archiving, Curating and Educating: The Case of Arte Útil Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-21 Alessandra Saviotti, Gemma Medina Estupiñán
Since its inception in 2013, the Arte Útil archive has become a collective steadily expanding as a tool for research and a resource for social practitioners. The archive is available for consultation at the website and consists of a growing database of around three hundred case studies that use art as a tool for societal change. It provides artistic strategies, a historical perspective, and a nexus
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Our Cherished Moments of Involuntary Realism: Charles Harrison, Modernism, and Art Writing Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-21 Stephen Moonie
In May 1969, Charles Harrison reviewed Morris Louis’ exhibition at the Waddington Galleries in London. Months later, he helped to install the exhibition When Attitudes Become Form at the Institute of Contemporary Arts. Harrison also wrote the catalogue text, published in Studio International. Those two texts marked a significant point in Harrison’s career. They were indicative of his disillusionment
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A Bronze Reliquary for an Ichneumon Dedicated to the Egyptian Goddess Wadjet Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-21 Robert Steven Bianchi
This is a short introduction to the hieroglyphic nature of ancient Egyptian material culture and its polyvalence using a bronze statuette of a lioness-headed goddess in front of an obelisk (formerly in the Omar Pasha Sultan Collection) as a case study. Because the lioness is not identified by an accompanying inscription, the essay demonstrates methods by which the identification and significance of
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Art and the City: Contemporary Art Galleries Districts in Paris from the End of the 19th Century until Today Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-18 Alain Quemin
The space invested by contemporary art galleries is of utmost importance. Not only is it essential to have suitable premises, but they must also be in the right place: The physical address carries a lot of weight. The benefits to galleries of being concentrated in the same areas are twofold: They are close to their competitors, which means they are close to the art market, and thus, by their collective
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An Interview with Gregory Sholette about the Precarious Workers Pageant Project Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-17 Cristina Pratas Cruzeiro, Anne Douglas, Cláudia Madeira, Helena Elias
PrecariousWorkers Pageant[...]
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Glass as a Fine Art Medium: Brief History and the Role of Adriano Berengo as a Fine Art Glass Impresario Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-17 Goshka Bialek
This article explores the role of glass as a medium in the fine arts rather than as a craft form. It includes a short history of glass as an art medium, the development of glass technologies and their application in the field of fine art. It reflects the distinctiveness of glass as a sculptural medium due to its optical properties and transparency; glass’s inherent characteristics create the unique
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New Form, New Material and Color Scheme, the Exposed Concrete Phenomenon—The Centennial Hall in Wrocław Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-12 Jerzy Ilkosz, Ryszard Wójtowicz, Jadwiga Urbanik
The aim of the article is to present the remarkable changes in architecture that took place in the 20th century. They can easily be called a revolution regarding the architectural form and the color scheme. Progress was being made through the development of reinforced concrete production methods. In the German Empire (Deutsches Kaiserreich), this material quickly found applications in more and more
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Wall Surfaces as Interfaces: The First Pompeian Style Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-11 Annette Haug
This article investigates the role of wall surfaces as an interactive medium in the First Pompeian Style, referring to examples from Pompeii. Five different aspects are investigated in more detail: (1) surfaces and their relation to the core; (2) surface qualities; (3) surfaces as image carriers; (4) surfaces and their relation to the physical space; (5) surfaces and their relation to the social space
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Following the Thread: Elite Iconography on Weaving Objects at Poggio Civitate (Murlo) Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-10 Nora K. Donoghue
Evidence for industrial scale production of numerous manufacturing processes has been attested in all phases of occupation at Poggio Civitate (Murlo). A subset of these, tools for the production of textiles and fibers, indicates that textile crafts were manufactured on a large scale as a part of a centralized and organized industry. These industrialized practices occurred within and around the monumental
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About Performance: A Conversation with Richard Schechner Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-07 Cláudia Madeira, Cristina Pratas Cruzeiro, Anne Douglas, Helena Elias
Richard Schechner is University Professor Emeritus at New York University (https://tisch [...]
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The Architectural Typology of Contemporary Façades for Public Buildings in the European Context Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-06 Joanna Jabłońska, Małgorzata Telesińska, Agnieszka Adamska, Joanna Gronostajska
In contemporary architecture, a border between an exterior and an interior—a façade—is variously designed in terms of form, style, response to climate or culture, individual approach or tools used. Despite the diversity and multi-tread theoretical and practical discourse, the Authors propose the typology of contemporary façades for public buildings (open to society) in the context of European cities
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Colour and Light in Berlin and Wrocław (Breslau) Department Stores Built between 1927 and 1930 Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-06 Krystyna Kirschke, Paweł Kirschke
This paper presents the theoretical assumptions and design praxis concerning colour schemes used in the multi-threaded Moderne, Streamline Moderne and Art Deco styles, which were used in Germany during the interwar period to design commercial facilities. We based our analysis on selected cases of department stores built in the years 1927–1930 in Berlin and Wrocław (Breslau at the time). Streamline
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The Last Flemish Primitive: Jan Vercruysse’s Self-Fashioning of Artisthood and National Identity Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-06 Anton Pereira Rodriguez
In 1989, the artist Jan Vercruysse (1948–2018) stated that he was “the last Flemish Primitive”. This comment, despite being only a fragment of a lengthy interview with Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, became a trope in subsequent writings on Vercruysse. I argue that the statement was part of a deliberate strategy by Vercruysse in shaping his identity as a (Belgian) artist. First, I focus on Vercruysse’s
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Recto and Verso: The Pictorial Fronts and the Marbled Reverses of Two Flemish Panel Paintings Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-04 Kathrin Borgers
From the first third of the 15th century onwards, panel paintings with marbled reverses increasingly appeared in Flemish art. The fronts of these panels primarily depicted religious narrative scenes or portraits. The backs were decorated with an abstract pattern, referred to as marbling. These painted marble facsimiles often differed in terms of design from other examples of stone imitations such as
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Changes in the Medieval Colour Scheme of the Southern Façade of Wrocław Town Hall—A Case Study Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-04 Andrzej Legendziewicz, Aleksandra Marcinów
The aim of this article is to discuss the colour transformations of one of the most representative Gothic façades in Central Europe—the southern façade of Wrocław Town Hall. Based on iconographic, architectural, and stratigraphic research, it was possible to find the remains of two stages of medieval colour changes. Based on these discoveries, an attempt was made to reconstruct both phases of the medieval
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Evolution in Approach to Colour in Tall Buildings’ Architecture on the Isle of Dogs, London, UK Arts Pub Date : 2022-01-04 Agnieszka Zimnicka, Ewa Balanicka, Aleksandra Kroll
Architects’ approach towards colour in architectural design evolved radically in the recent 50 years, and ranges from a modernist aversion to a vernacular appreciation. These changes were linked to the development of culture, technology and scientific knowledge in different areas connected to human functioning. The authors have examined evolution in design of tall buildings in the Isle of Dogs in London