Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Boris Lurie and Wolf Vostell (Bilingual edition): Art after the Shoah / Kunst nach der Shoah [Pehme köide]

Text by , Text by , Text by , Text by , Text by , Text by , Text by , Text by , Text by , Edited by
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x240 mm, kaal: 1620 g, 300 Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-May-2022
  • Kirjastus: Hatje Cantz
  • ISBN-10: 3775752161
  • ISBN-13: 9783775752169
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 61,66 €*
  • * saadame teile pakkumise kasutatud raamatule, mille hind võib erineda kodulehel olevast hinnast
  • See raamat on trükist otsas, kuid me saadame teile pakkumise kasutatud raamatule.
  • Kogus:
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Tasuta tarne
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x240 mm, kaal: 1620 g, 300 Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-May-2022
  • Kirjastus: Hatje Cantz
  • ISBN-10: 3775752161
  • ISBN-13: 9783775752169
The art of Boris Lurie (* 1924, Leningrad) and Wolf Vostell (* 1932, Leverkusen) is determined by the break in civilization in Germany in 1933, which made the German genocide of German and European Jews (the Shoah) possible. Both artists make the Shoah the subject of their work in a radical way. They work - initially independently of one another - with the means of painting and during the 1950s they resort to the stylistic devices of the first avant-garde: Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism. They strategically employ collage and assembly techniques. Vostell later develops the subject further in the media of happening and video art while Lurie takes up writing. In 1964 the artists met in New York and entertained a lifelong friendship.
Preface 6(2)
Foreword 8(4)
Lenders 12(4)
Eckhart J. Gillen
Daniel Koep
Boris Lurie and Wolf Vostell: Friendship between Artists after the Shoah
16(24)
Eckhart J. Gillen
Boris Lurie in Search of the Dead Souls of His Women
40(72)
Dorothea Schone
Resistance to Brutalization and Forgetting: Mass Mediatization and Coming to Terms with History in the Work of Wolf Vostell
112(48)
Beate Reifenscheid
Riga, New York, Paris: First Encounters and Connections
160(46)
Katharina Sykora
Black Letter: Broken Femininity and the Afterlife of the Shoah in the Work of Boris Lurie
206(36)
Rudij Bergmann
Of the Visible and the Speculative: Lurie's Jewish Roots
242(22)
Daniel Koep
Bram Groenteman
Images of the Shoah in Light of the Mass Media of the German "Economic Miracle": KP Brehmer, Gerhard Richter, and Wolf Vostell
264(28)
Tom Freudenheim
Boris Lurie and the New York Art World of the 1960s
292(14)
Bram Groenteman
Artists' Biographies 306(20)
List of Works
322(4)
Boris Lurie
Wolf Vostell
Happenings and Video Works 326(4)
Wolf Vostell
Bibliography 330(2)
Authors' Biographies 332(2)
Colophon and Image Credits 334
After surviving several labor and concentration camps, the Jewish artist BORIS LURIE (1924-2008) moved to New York in 1946. With often direct reference to the Shoah, Lurie commented on the society and consumer culture of his time.

The German artist WOLF VOSTELL (1932-1988) was a protagonist of the Fluxus movement and a pioneer of happening- and video art. Vostell confronted post-war European audiences with its recent past in a variety of ways.