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City as Subject: Public Art and Urban Discourse in Berlin [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 732 g, 46 colour and 34 bw illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • ISBN-10: 1350258601
  • ISBN-13: 9781350258600
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 256 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 732 g, 46 colour and 34 bw illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Mar-2022
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • ISBN-10: 1350258601
  • ISBN-13: 9781350258600

In The City as Subject, Carolyn S. Loeb examines distinctive bodies of public art in Berlin: legal and illegal murals painted in West Berlin in the 1970s and 1980s, post-reunification public sculptures, and images and sites from the street art scene. Her careful analyses show how these developed new architectural and spatial vocabularies that drew on the city's infrastructure and daily urban experience. These works challenged mainstream urban development practices and engaged with citizen activism and with a wider civic discourse about what a city can be.

Loeb extends this urban focus to her examination of the extensive outdoor installation of the Berlin Wall Memorial and its mandate to represent the history of the city's division. She studies its surrounding neighborhoods to show that, while the Memorial adopts many of the urban-oriented vocabularies established by the earlier works of public art she examines, it truncates the story of urban division, which stretches beyond the Wall's existence. Loeb suggests that, by embracing more multi-vocal perspectives, the Memorial could encourage the kind of participatory and heterogeneous construction of the city championed by the earlier works of public art.

Arvustused

Grounded in a close and critical reading of a number of works of public art and monuments in contemporary Berlin, The City as Subject draws on a sophisticated array of scholarship rooted in critical urban studies and the history of memory, providing something of a blueprint for activist artists and citizens in other places. * Joe Perry, Associate Professor of History, Georgia State University, USA *

Muu info

Carolyn S. Loeb examines three bodies of Berlins postwar and contemporary public arthighlighting the importance of the citys forms for visual expression while presenting Berlin as connected with the past and shaped by its citizens.
List of Illustrations
viii
Preface and Acknowledgments xv
1 Introduction: Public Art and the Affirmation of the City
1(20)
An Overview of Themes
3(8)
Berlin Background
11(2)
The Aim and Description of This Book
13(8)
2 West Berlin Walls, Street Art, and the Right to the City
21(48)
The Murals and Their West Berlin Context
24(15)
The Right to the City: A New Paradigm for Public Art
39(6)
Street Art and the Right to the City
45(24)
3 City Spaces: Contemporary Public Sculpture in Berlin
69(58)
New Monuments
73(9)
Networks
82(7)
Voids
89(8)
Ground Planes
97(8)
Conflicts
105(8)
Sculpture Reclaiming the Urban Realm
113(14)
4 The Memorial Landscape of the Berlin Wall
127(74)
Where Was the Wall?
134(13)
Toward Memorialization
147(7)
The Memorial Landscape
154(17)
The Afterlife of the Memorial Landscape
171(4)
The Persistence of Forgetting
175(6)
The Memorial and the City
181(20)
5 Conclusion: Public Art within an Urban Discourse
201(9)
Bibliography 210(15)
Index 225
Carolyn S. Loeb is Associate Professor Emerita in Art & Architectural History in the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University, USA. She has published on public art and urban redevelopment in Berlin, among other subjects.