Daniel Rubim I Projeto Latitude <[email protected]> Mousse #48 out now 1 mensagem Mousse Magazine <[email protected]> Responder a: Mousse Magazine <[email protected]> Para: [email protected] 16 de abril de 2015 12:40 Issue #48 AprilMay 2015 Buy Subscribe iPad Archive Blog Publishing CAROLEE SCHNEEMANN More Than Meat Joy by Massimiliano Gioni Through her variegated activities in painting, filmmaking, video art and performance, in particular, Carolee Schneemann has always worked on the theme of women’s selfdetermination, rejecting the idea of “hisstory” narrated from a male viewpoint. Massimiliano Gioni met with the artist to talk about her latest projects in art and publishing, and to reexamine several legendary works. ✕ Read more ART ABOUT FUCKING by Andrew Berardini Andrew Berardini takes a look at “art about fucking” and sizes up past masters and interesting newcomers. As Susan Sontag said, “consciousness is harnessed to flesh.” Therefore every work that displays sex given freely can inspire people to take back ownership of their/our bodies. FROM THE NAKED FUTURE by Nick Currie In the next century, due to global warming, nudity will not be a problem. Nick Currie accessed an article written by nudists in the year 2102 and we, art historians, cannot help but feel a certain pride when we realize that art culture is the one most in tune with our highly evolved descendants. THE MULTIVERSALISTS by Mark von Schlegell Ever since the intuitions of Giordano Bruno, we have been aware of the possible existence of infinite universes. Mark von Schlegell takes us even further, towards the fascinating possibility of Hugh Everett’s Multiverse, a set of coexisting and alternative universes outside our spacetime. ✕ Read more PARVIZ KIMIAVI 6 dreams on Parviz Kimiavi’s study of dreams: “2 or 3 things I keep remembering from the filmmaker” by Morad Montazami Parviz Kimiavi’s outstanding films were pioneering examples of New Wave or alternative filmmaking in 1970s Iran, but remained quite overlooked in the aftermath of the 1979 Revolution. Morad Montazami offers insights about Kimiavi’s practice and bits of revived history about to be unearthed. ON SATIN ISLAND by John Menick The globalized economy has made the pursuit of pristine otherness almost impossible, and the anthropologist always has the sensation of having arrived too late. In the wake of the latest novel by Tom McCarthy Satin Island, John Menick analyzes the process of “selfothering” that transforms the all encompassing inner structure of the corporation into an exotic “other.” ADELHYD VAN BENDER Ideal Idol: The Holy Art and Writing of Adelhyd van Bender by Tina Kukielski The universe of Adelhyd van Bender is based on a complex and cryptic structure, his apartment, temple of an impenetrable cult. Tina Kukielski has explored this dense cosmos to offer us the image of a man whose art formulated the only response in the face of a world on the brink of self destruction. ✕ Read more JAMES LOVELOCK We Live on a Dynamic Planet by Hans Ulrich Obrist Hans Ulrich Obrist met with the father of the “Gaia hypothesis,” scientist and inventor James Lovelock, to trace back through the latter’s amazing existence: from a childhood curiosity for science to the invention of the electron capture detector, the inventions for NASA’s planetary exploration program and his latest hypotheses in his recent book A Rough Ride to the Future. DANIEL STEEGMANN MANGRANÉ Daniel Steegmann Mangrané’s Mata Atlântica by Andrew Durbin Daniel Steegmann Mangrané returns to the Mata Atlântica—the Brazilian rain forest reduced by 85% by humandriven deforestation—and brings it to viewers in a spectral dimension, reducing its vivid hues to simple black and white. Andrew Durbin analyzes this work that critiques the spatial and ontological boundaries between man and nature.
© Copyright 2024