On Kawara -- Silence

(Text by (Art/Photo Books)) (Text by (Art/Photo Books))
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Product Details
Price
$65.00  $60.45
Publisher
Guggenheim Museum
Publish Date
Pages
264
Dimensions
13.0 X 9.9 X 1.6 inches | 4.5 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780892075195

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About the Author
Tom McCarthy is a British novelist based in London. His most recent novel, Satin Island, was shortlisted for the 2015 Man Booker Prize.
Director of Postgraduate Studies and Curriculum Development, Design School, University of Technology Sydney, Australia.

Alberta-born Anne Wheeler earned degrees in mathematics and music, while performing in theatre whenever possible. Her first films were documentaries, but by the 1980s, she was making Canadian features such as Bye Bye Blues, The Diviners, Better than Chocolate, and Loyalties, winning numerous national and international awards. A master storyteller, she has garnered seven honorary doctorates, an Order of Canada, and a Lifetime Achievement Award (being the first woman to do so) from the Directors Guild of Canada. She lives in White Rock, BC, and continues to write, direct, and mentor younger filmmakers.

Reviews
On Kawara: Silence, a quietly rapturous exhibition that opens this weekend at the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York, showcases the career of an artist who used minimal means for maximum effect. The artist died last year while preparing this show - instantly transforming his sequential paintings from an open-ended feat to a closed structure - and I had expected, when the show was announced, that Kawara's insistently spare art would feel funereal in the Guggenheim's grand spiral. I was wrong; it is a joy. Like each of his date paintings, the exhibition is somehow awesome and modest at once. It reckons with the grandest questions of being and time, and yet feels lived in, comfortable, and winningly unpretentious. It brings cosmic time down to human scale, and then makes an individual life feel as broad as the universe.--Jason Farago "The Guardian"
Like a true Conceptualist, Mr. Kawara stuck to the facts and also transcended them, endowing them with a resonant appeal and a sense of form as fine-tuned as any Minimalist sculptor's. His art helped shape Conceptualism's love of uninflected information. It fused the movement's basic duality of image plus text into an instantly legible unit before it actually existed. It also bridged the gap between the modernist monochrome as devotional object and the Duchampian ready-made.--Roberta Smith "The New York Times"