Sculptural Materiality in the Age of Conceptualism

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33rd Venice Biennale
A01=Marin R. Sullivan
Abate's Photographs
Abate’s Photographs
art history
Arte Povera
Asphalt Rundown
Author_Marin R. Sullivan
Beuys's Work
Beuys’s Work
Category=ABA
Category=AFKB
collaborative art practices
conceptual art
contemporary sculpture theory
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
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eq_isMigrated=2
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Fabio Sargentini
Germano Celant
Italian conceptual sculpture case studies
Jannis Kounellis
Joseph Beuys
Kinloch Rannoch
Kunsthalle Bern
land art
Late Postwar Period
material experimentation
materiality
Michelangelo Pistoletto
Mirror Paintings
Narcissus Garden
Palazzo Delle Esposizioni
photographic documentation in art
photography
postwar art movements
postwar period
Robert Smithson
Sculptural Materiality
Sculptural Practice
sculpture
Smithson's Asphalt Rundown
Smithson’s Asphalt Rundown
spatial installation analysis
transnational
twentieth century
Ugo Mulas
Van Der Marck
Vanguard Art
Venice Biennale
Vitex Agnus Castus
Yayoi Kusama

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472465986
  • Weight: 657g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Dec 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Sculptural Materiality in the Age of Conceptualism is structured around four distinct but interrelated projects initially realized in Italy between 1966 and 1972: Yayoi Kusama’s Narcissus Garden, Michelangelo Pistoletto’s Newspaper Sphere (Sfera di giornali), Robert Smithson’s Asphalt Rundown, and Joseph Beuys’s Arena. These works all utilized non-traditional materials, collaborative patronage models, and alternative modes of display to create a spatially and temporally dispersed arena of matter and action, with photography serving as a connective, material thread within the sculpture it reflects. While created by major artists of the postwar period, these particular projects have yet to receive substantive art historical analysis, especially from a sculptural perspective. Here, they anchor a transnational narrative in which sculpture emerged as a node, a center of transaction comprising multiple material phenomenon, including objects, images, and actors. When seen as entangled, polymorphous entities, these works suggest that the charge of sculpture in the late postwar period came from its concurrent existence as both three-dimensional phenomena and photographic image, in the interchanges among the materials that continue to activate and alter the constitution of sculpture within the contemporary sphere.

Marin R. Sullivan is Assistant Professor of Art History, Department of Art, Keene State College, USA.