Hans Haacke und Pierre Huyghe: Non-Human Living Sculptures seit den 1960er-Jahren
German
By (author): Ursula Ströbele
Since the 1960s, artists have questioned the traditional idea of opposition between art and nature. They have incorporated animals and plants as co-actors in their work, and so established a sculptural aesthetic of the living, which called for a redefinition of the sculptural genre. This study is the first to examine so-called Non-Human Living Sculptures using the examples of Hans Haacke and Pierre Huyghe. Following a re-reading of the historiography of modernist sculpture, the author re-evaluates and expands on existing theories in individual work analyses. She shows how Haackes real-time systems, determined by US systems theory, biology and cybernetics, as well as his rejection of the object aesthetic have shaped contemporary positions such as Huyghes situational-aesthetic works.
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First comprehensive academic study of socalled Non-Human Living Sculptures
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Re-reading of the historiography of 20th century sculpture
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Sculptural aesthetics of the living