Archivi categoria: ricostruzioni
roger waters tells the tragic story of syd barrett
le tossine del romanticismo (1)
oct 27th, zoom: gardens of eloquence: european rulership and the late medieval garden
https://www.history.ac.uk/events/gardens-eloquence-european-rulership-and-late-medieval-garden
The medieval enclosed garden is something of a commonplace. Outside of scholarship on specific sites, much discussion on the enclosed garden tends to focus on the timeworn literary tropes that such spaces evoke: the hortus conclusus, paradise, locus amoenus, plaisance, garden of love, etc. Often this is framed within a teleological narrative that posits the medieval garden’s enclosure as the antithesis to the expansive scope and humanist references of gardens of the renaissance and beyond. Very little discussion focuses on how medieval gardens were actually used and experienced within the larger spaces they were situated. Focusing on actual sites, contemporary accounts, as well as the evidence provided by art of the period, this paper explores how the late medieval garden was used as both a frame for Valois, Burgundian and Hapsburg rulership and as an emblem of identity.
guy debord, “appunti preliminari”
Sandro Ricaldone
GUY DEBORD
Appunti preliminari
a cura di Laurence Le Bras, Emmanuel Guy
traduzione di Mario Lippolis
Ortica Editrice, 2022
Non si tratta di mettere la poesia al servizio della rivoluzione, piuttosto di mettere la rivoluzione al servizio della poesia. Questi Appunti permettono di conoscere in modo più profondo il pensiero di Debord che, durante la seconda metà del secolo scorso, condusse un’incessante “guerra del tempo” dentro e contro la propria epoca, considerata come una glaciazione “spettacolare-mercantile” della storia. In questi Appunti lo vediamo via via progettare e mettere a fuoco alcune delle proprie mosse teoriche, iperpolitiche, cinematografiche, linguistiche, autobiografiche, in particolare relative alla conduzione dell’Internazionale Situazionista, alla memoria storica del recente movimento delle occupazioni del maggio francese del 1968 come a quella della Fronda antiassolutistica del Diciassettesimo secolo, alla preparazione dei suoi lungometraggi cinematografici, alla progettazione di un dizionario critico della distruzione contemporanea del linguaggio comune, fino alla stesura di un resoconto della propria vita che per il fondo come per la forma di “confessione cinica” vessi e demoralizzi le autorità contemporanee.
pasquale polidori: una lettura di documenta fifteen
da leggere e includere in qualsiasi ragionamento e dialogo in tema di arte, processualità, condivisione, …
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https://unclosed.eu/rubriche/osservatorio/recensioni-attualita/400-le-sedie-di-documenta-fifteen-per-un-sabotaggio-del-pathos.html
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di 5 in 5. dal verbo al segno
Di 5 in 5 Dal verbo al segno: Cappi Accame Verdi Minarelli Miccini Pignotti Pozzati Sitta Toti Cavallo – 1980 (autografo di Enzo Minarelli).
Da un post di Roberto Canella
Continua a leggereinterviste per “tutto è santo”: pasolini al palazzo delle esposizioni
Più di 700 pezzi tra fotografie vintage, giornali d’epoca, prime edizioni di libri, riviste, articoli, interventi, e ancora costumi di scena, dattiloscritti, ciclostilati, oltre a filmati, dischi, nastri. Tutto questo è “Pier Paolo Pasolini. Tutto è santo”, la mostra aperta dal 19 ottobre al Palazzo delle Esposizioni a Roma dedicata al celeberrimo scrittore, poeta, regista e drammaturgo italiano. “La produzione di Pasolini è sterminata ma è anche altissima di valore. Noi abbiamo continui e ininterrotti frammenti, spesso incompiuti, di un’intelligenza incandescente”, ha spiegato il curatore della mostra Giuseppe Garrera. “In questa mostra nulla è finito perché l’intento è proprio quello di farla finire con il visitatore che tornando a casa può approfondire altro”, ha aggiunto la co-curatrice Clara Tosi Pamphili.
Di Francesco Giovannetti
lindsay caplan, “arte programmata. freedom, control and the computer in 1960s italy”
Sandro Ricaldone
LINDSAY CAPLAN
Arte Programmata
Freedom, Control and the Computer in 1960s Italy
University of Minnesota Press, 2022
Tracing the evolution of the Italian avant-garde’s pioneering experiments with art and technology and their subversion of freedom and control
In postwar Italy, a group of visionary artists used emergent computer technologies as both tools of artistic production and a means to reconceptualize the dynamic interrelation between individual freedom and collectivity. Arte Programmata traces the multifaceted practices of these groundbreaking artists and their conviction that technology could provide the conditions for a liberated social life.
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Lindsay Caplan’s Arte Programmata offers a compelling account of a group of lesser-known artists affiliated with the Italian Arte Programmata movement, whose experimental art and design practices, emerging in the nascent years of computerization, pointedly (and presciently) engaged with political questions around freedom and control, individuality and collectivity. Beautifully written, sharply analytic, and free of jargon, Caplan’s incisive study should find a place on the bookshelves of anyone interested in the roots and impacts of technological change.
— Janet Kraynak, author of Contemporary Art and the Digitization of Everyday Life
“the consultant”: nam june paik’s papers 1968-1979
Sandro Ricaldone
THE CONSULTANT
Paik’s Papers 1968–1979
Curator: Kim Yoonseo
Nam June Paik Art Center
10 Paiknamjune-ro, Giheung-gu, Yongin-si
Gyeonggi-do
October 13, 2022–March 26, 2023
Nam June Paik left behind various documents in different languages, including letters, scores, essays, proposals, and reports. One of these, a 1974 report somewhat grandly titled “MEDIA PLANNING FOR THE POST INDUSTRIAL AGE: Only 26 years left until the 21st Century,” seems more like a policy research document than an artist’s note. Instead of simply sharing bold ambitions, the report contains detailed and concrete plans for implementation. The text shares a vision akin to what has been realized today with the internet, stressing the urgency of being able to transmit ideas in real time through “electronic super highway,” just as the building of highways in the 1930s had enabled the movement of goods and the achievement of an economic revival. Emphasizing that “Mind pollution is as bad as air pollution,” Paik also urges caution in ensuring that media communications are not monopolized by technology experts or some “mysterious power complex.”
Paik actually did carry the title of “consultant.” While he was based in New York, he carried out his work with Rockefeller Foundation Art Grants in “Television/Video/Film” and for a roughly 20-year period beginning in the mid-1960s, he served in official and unofficial advisory roles, playing a leading part in emphasizing the importance of supporting medial field and proposing directions for its development. During this time, his video art and the video community were broadcast on television channels, discussed in scholarly contexts, and exhibited, collected, and proliferated by art institutions. His proposal expressed his bold ambitions of solving social problems through the medium of art, with immediate implementation plans laid out in considerable detail: digitalization to record and preserve human cultural history, video exchanges as a tool for learning and resolving our lack of understanding toward different cultures, the creation of electronic superhighways as communication systems connecting the world, and the continued pursuit of diverse representation in public broadcasting content.
As its title suggests, The Consultant: Paik’s Papers 1968–1979, a special exhibition commemorating the 90th anniversary of Paik’s birth, takes the artist’s reports as its starting point. Rather than emphasizing his individual achievements and the aesthetic context for his video art, it considers Paik as a “policymaker” based on reports that he wrote in English between 1968 and 1979: “EXPANDED EDUCATION FOR THE PAPERLESS SOCIETY” (1968), “MEDIA PLANNING FOR THE POST INDUSTRIAL AGE” (1974), and “HOW TO KEEP EXPERIMENTAL VIDEO ON PBS NATIONAL PROGRAMMING” (1979). Compared with his achievements focusing for a lifetime on the medium of video art, relatively little is known of how Paik investigated the raisons d’e^tre for social infrastructure and art and suggested new avenues for them. As it examines his work through the lens of Paik’s papers, the exhibition urges the viewer to see Paik in a new light, while showing how the realization of his artistic vision was underpinned not only by institutional support from the government, but also by collaboration with and support from private foundations, patronage funds, public schools, laboratories, broadcasters and art institutions.
The exhibition’s aims lie in taking a detour from the historic highway of regarding Paik as the “father of video art” and seeing him in a different light on a different sort of path.leaving behind the crossroads of preexisting knowledge and experience to find new opportunities for liberation. Exploring Nam June Paik as an analyst, a media consultant, and an agent of change for social infrastructure and technology during the social transitional period of the 1960s is a way of uncovering new tasks that have heretofore received little attention in studies of the artist, while also creating new points of contact with his works of electronic art. As we stand amid a different kind of digital shift and social change today, Paik’s media consulting is a work that is still in progress.
l’italia festeggia l’arrivo dell’autunno
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