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Philosophy of Textile: Between Practice and Theory [Kõva köide]

(Westminster School of Arts, UK)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 144 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 378 g, 26 colour illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • ISBN-10: 1472525655
  • ISBN-13: 9781472525659
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 144 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 378 g, 26 colour illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • ISBN-10: 1472525655
  • ISBN-13: 9781472525659
Teised raamatud teemal:
Textile is at once a language, a concept and a material thing. Philosophers such as Plato, Deleuze and Derrida have notably drawn on weaving processes to illustrate their ideas, and artists such as Ann Hamilton, Louise Bourgeois and Chiharu Shiota explore matters such as the seam, the needle and thread, and the flow of viscous materials in their work. Yet thinking about textile and making textile are often treated as separate and distinct practices, rather than parallel modes.

This beautifully illustrated book brings together for the first time the language and materiality of textile to develop new models of thinking, writing and making. Through the work of thinkers such as Roland Barthes, Hélène Cixous and Luce Irigaray, and international artists like Eva Hesse and Helen Chadwick, textile practitioner, theorist and writer Catherine Dormor puts forward a new philosophy of textile. Exploring the material behaviours and philosophical language of folding, shimmering, seaming, viscosity, fraying and caressing, Dormor demonstrates how textile practice and theory are intricately woven together.

Arvustused

The bibliography is extensive, giving an interesting insight into the metaphorical use of the words that textiles have made to the language. * Book Threads * Dormor provides a crucial model of integrated writing about practice that entwines the academic and creative voice. In the face of much writing that adopts linear models not because of their usefulness, but for lack of another model, here the academic and creative voice finally hold theory and practice as one. * Jessica Hemmings, National College of Art & Design, Dublin, Ireland *

Muu info

A Philosophy of Textile brings together the materiality, imagery and language of textile to develop practice-based modes of thinking, making and writing.
List of Plates
vii
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(10)
Textile as making: techne between practice and theory
4(1)
Weaving the chapters
5(3)
(Inter)mingling
8(3)
1 Folding
11(14)
An unfolding of making
12(5)
Metaphorics and metonymy as enfolding modes for thinking
17(3)
Textile-space
20(2)
La Maison Baroque
22(3)
2 Textile as shimmering surface
25(16)
Veils: A space of scintillation
28(1)
Faintly gleaming
29(2)
Illicit encounters
31(3)
Absurdity
34(2)
Through the looking glass
36(5)
3 Seaming
41(24)
Seaming as Passage
44(3)
Hand and machine stitching
47(3)
Seaming as suturing
50(7)
Seaming as Trace
57(5)
Conjunctions and crossings
62(3)
4 Textile as viscous substance
65(16)
Attacking the boundary
69(2)
Collapsing boundaries
71(2)
Flow
73(2)
Ontological secretions
75(3)
A substance between two states
78(3)
5 Fraying
81(18)
Frayed and fraying: A politics of translation
83(2)
Frayed and fraying cloth: Broken and contingent
85(5)
To the edge: Pointing away from the centre
90(2)
Worn through
92(4)
Fraying
96(3)
6 Textile as caressing subject/object
99(12)
Affective touching
100(1)
Proximity
101(2)
Opening out - becoming
103(3)
Measuring distance
106(1)
First actions of hands
107(2)
Synoptic-synthaesthetic caressing
109(2)
Conclusion 111(6)
Thinking-through-practice
111(1)
Textile practices as methodology
112(2)
Practice-theory interplay
114(3)
Notes 117(2)
Bibliography 119(7)
Index 126
Catherine Dormor is a practising artist, Reader in Textile Practices and Head of Research Programmes and at the Royal College of Art, London UK.