• Media type: Book; Still Image; Exhibition Catalogue; Illustrated Book
  • Title: Dialectical materialism : aspects of British sculpture since the 1960s
  • Contributor: Wood, Jon [VerfasserIn von ergänzendem Text]; Vernon, Jonathan [VerfasserIn von ergänzendem Text]
  • Corporation: Karsten Schubert Ltd
  • imprint: London: Ridinghouse, 2019
  • Extent: 53 Seiten
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9781909932548; 190993254X
  • RVK notation: LO 61890 : 19. und 20. Jahrhundert
  • Keywords: Großbritannien > Plastik > Geschichte 1960-2000
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Impressum: "Published in 2019 by Ridinghouse on the occasion of the exhibition Dialectical Materialism: Aspects of British Sculpture Since the 1960s at Karsten Schubert ... London ... 28 September-6 October 2019."
  • Description: Dialectical Materialism: Aspects of British Sculpture Since the 1960s', conceived by Karsten Schubert, is a bold, subtle and imaginative intervention into this complex subject, reconsidering its terrain through a small selection of artists and objects. In doing so, it focuses on objects more than contexts, on the art work not the art school. 0The title has two parts. The first part, ?Dialectical Materialism?, a much debated term drawn from Hegel and Marxist political philosophy, is deployed here to point to the dynamic and generative forces of opposition and reaction that have charged and driven the making of much sculpture in Britain since the post-war years. In the essay that follows, Jonathan Vernon looks into the potential of this concept in relation to the developing treatment of material, space and object-hood found in British sculpture since 1960. 0The second part, ?Aspects of British Sculpture?, is drawn from Herbert Read?s introduction to the catalogue of British Pavilion for the XXVI Venice Biennale in 1952. In this text, which championed the work of Lynn Chadwick, Reg Butler, William Turnbull, Kenneth Armitage, Geoffrey Clarke, Bernard Meadows, Eduardo Paolozzi, Robert Adams and Henry Moore.00Exhibition: Karsten Schubert Gallery, London, UK (28.09.-06.10.2019)

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  • Shelf-mark: 2019 4 011511
  • Item ID: 34052527
  • Status: Loanable, place order
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