Lost properties ; some arguments for and against the dematerializatoin of art
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Everyone wants to be an artist. The number of under- graduate students completing fine arts degrees at US colleges doubled in the years between 1985–2010, according to the Digest of Education Statistics. But being an artist doesn’t necessarily mean making drawings or paintings or sculpture or even installations or videos. The desire to pursue a life in “fine art” simply means a desire to respond creatively to the present, just as the disciplines of “poetry” or “rock & roll” were ciphers for countercultural lifestyles in other eras.
TitleLost properties ; some arguments for and against the dematerializatoin of art
Author
Place of publicationLos Angeles
PublisherSemiotext(e)
Year of publication2014
Pagination39 p. p.
Dimensions21 cm
Materialboek
Series titleWhitney Biennial 2014 pamphlets; 19
ISBN978-1-58435-136-8
NotesSemiotexte has produced twenty-eight pamphlets as part of its contribution to the Whitney Biennial by philosophers, writers and critics associated with the press.
Persons keyword Chris Kraus
| Copy number | Shelfmark | Loan status | |
|---|---|---|---|
| B-2015/77 | ,7.01,WH:I"2014 | Available |
| Copy number | B-2015/77 |
| Shelfmark | |
| Loan status | Available |