Leaving Art
Writings on Performance, Politics, and Publics, 1974-2007
Inbunden, Engelska, 2010
Av Suzanne Lacy
2 179 kr
Finns i fler format (1)
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2010-08-24
- Mått157 x 236 x 36 mm
- Vikt862 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor277
- FörlagDuke University Press
- ISBN9780822345527
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Suzanne Lacy is an internationally known artist whose work includes installations, video, and large-scale performances on social themes and urban issues. She is also chair of the Master in Fine Arts in Public Practice program at Otis College of Art and Design. Lacy edited the collection Mapping the Terrain: New Genre Public Art and has published more than seventy articles on public and performance art.
- Illustrations ixPreface xiiiAcknowledgments xvIntroduction. Suzanne Lacy: Three Decades of Performing and Writing/Writing and Performing / Moira Roth xviiPart 1. Learning to Look: The Seventies Introduction 21. Prostitution Notes (1974) 52. Falling Apart (1980) 203. Body Contract (1974) 30Photo Essay. Learn Where the Meat Comes From (1976) 434. Cinderella in a Dragster (1977) 485. The Bag Lady: On Memory (1982) 526. The Life and Times of Donaldina Cameron (with Linda Palumbo and Kathleen Chang) (1978) 577. In Mourning and In Rage (With Analysis Aforethought) (1978) 648. Learning to Look: The Relationship between Art and Popular Culture Images (with Leslie Labowitz) (1970) 729. Feminist Artists: Developing a Media Strategy for the Movement (with Leslie Labowitz) (1981) 8310. Time, Bones, and Art: Anatomy of a Decade (1995) 92Part 2. Political Performance Art: The Eighties Introduction 10811. Broomsticks and Banners: The Winds of Change (1980) 10912. The Greening of California Performance: Art of Social Change-A Case Study (1982) 11413. Made for TV: California Performance in Mass Media (1982) 12014. Battle of New Orleans (1980) 12615. Beneath the Seams (1982) 13716. In the Shadows: An Analysis of The Dark Madonna (1990) 14417. Political Performance Art: A Discussion by Suzanne Lacy and Lucy R. Lippard (1985) 151Part 3. Debated Territory: The Nineties Introduction 16018. The Name of the Game (1991) 16119. Debated Territory: Toward a Critical Language for Public Art (1994) 17220. Affinities: Thoughts on an Incomplete History (1994) 18521. Love, Cancer, Memory: A Few Stories (1996) 19422. Cancer Notes (with Leslie Becker) (1995) 21123. What It Takes (with Ann Wettrich) (2002) 222Part 4. Leaving Art: After 2000 Introduction 23624. The Skin of Memory/La Piel de la Memoria (with Pilar RiaÑo-AlcalÁ) (2006) 23725. Seeking an American Identity (Working Inward from the Margins) (2003) 25026. Cop in the Head, Cop in the Street (2006) 26727. Having It Good: Reflections on Engaged Art and Engaged Buddhism (2005) 28428. Hard Work in a Working-Class Town (2006) 30029. Tracing Allan Kaprow (2007) 319Afterword: In ter ceptions and In tensions-Situating Suzanne Lacy's Practice / Kerstin Mey 327Appendix. Chronology and Selected Performances and Installations 339Notes 343Index 369
“For nearly 40 years Ms. Lacy’s collaborative, community-based art projects, some involving hundreds of people, have been grappling with matters of race, class and possible social change with a hands-on audacity that few artists can match. This book, with a persuasive introduction by the artist-historian Moira Roth, at last puts Ms. Lacy’s own fluent accounts of her life and work between covers. The result is a moving and feisty document of a committed life, one that students of the art of our time will be grateful for in the years ahead.” - Holland Cotter, New York Times “Reflection in and on the present moment–rather than a concern for prestige or posterity–defines and sets apart Lacy’s experimental documents as in some way ‘live’ themselves, making Leaving Art a strong resource for public and live artists working now.” - Becky Hunter, Whitehot Magazine “The book, then, performs best as an archive of methods. One text explicitlyoutlines how to develop a media strategy for a feminist campaign, with excellent practical tips on structuring an event and how to convey its meaning to the media. But, more subliminally, we can gauge throughout how certainty wavers and how uncertainty, when viewed in retrospect, is ultimately productive.” - Sally O’Reilly, Art Monthly “Lacy remains close in spirit to the feminism that emerged in the late '60s. Many of her most significant performances directly addressed women's issues, especially rape, prostitution, pornography and physical aging. With a canny understanding of mass communications. Lacy calibrated her staged actions to garner media attention, and to be readily comprehensible to those outside the art world. One of the most consistent elements of her activity is its emphasis on forming multiracial alliances under the banner of ‘Women.’” - Abigail Solomon-Godeau, Art in America “As both artist and theorist, Suzanne Lacy has pioneered the field of collaborative and socially engaged art. Over the past several decades, she has refigured artistic practice as a means for the production of new publics. This book is an incomparable toolbox for anyone seeking a renewal of art’s social and political potential today.”-Hans Ulrich Obrist, Co-Director of Exhibitions and Programmes and Director of International Projects at the Serpentine Gallery, London “Suzanne Lacy is the most important public artist working today, in part because she is also an inspired organizer, writer, and public intellectual. Multicultural and multicentered, and devoted to civic dialogue, she balances esthetics and politics, pragmatics and imagination, while collaborating with those living inside the issues. Her feminist energy infuses this book. It will turn many heads.”-Lucy R. Lippard, author of The Pink Glass Swan: Selected Feminist Essays on Art “Suzanne Lacy’s work is a communal improvisation inviting life to happen in all its drama, absurdity, pain, and danger. At its best, it has the passion and complexity of Action Painting.”-Eleanor Antin, artist and Professor Emeritus, University of California, San Diego “For nearly 40 years Ms. Lacy’s collaborative, community-based art projects, some involving hundreds of people, have been grappling with matters of race, class and possible social change with a hands-on audacity that few artists can match. This book, with a persuasive introduction by the artist-historian Moira Roth, at last puts Ms. Lacy’s own fluent accounts of her life and work between covers. The result is a moving and feisty document of a committed life, one that students of the art of our time will be grateful for in the years ahead.” - Holland Cotter (New York Times) “Lacy remains close in spirit to the feminism that emerged in the late '60s. Many of her most significant performances directly addressed women's issues, especially rape, prostitution, pornography and physical aging. With a canny understanding of mass communications. Lacy calibrated her staged actions to garner media attention, and to be readily comprehensible to those outside the art world. One of the most consistent elements of her activity is its emphasis on forming multiracial alliances under the banner of ‘Women.’” - Abigail Solomon-Godeau (Art in America) “Reflection in and on the present moment–rather than a concern for prestige or posterity–defines and sets apart Lacy’s experimental documents as in some way ‘live’ themselves, making Leaving Art a strong resource for public and live artists working now.” - Becky Hunter (Whitehot Magazine) “The book, then, performs best as an archive of methods. One text explicitlyoutlines how to develop a media strategy for a feminist campaign, with excellent practical tips on structuring an event and how to convey its meaning to the media. But, more subliminally, we can gauge throughout how certainty wavers and how uncertainty, when viewed in retrospect, is ultimately productive.” - Sally O'Reilly (Art Monthly)
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