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Art and the city / Nicolas Whybrow.

By: Whybrow, NicolasPublication details: London ; New York : I.B. Tauris, c2011 Description: xv, 198 p. : ill. ; 22 cmISBN: 1845114655 (pbk.); 9781845114657 (pbk.); 9781845114664 (hbk.); 1845114663 (hbk.)Subject(s): Art and anthropology | Public art | Art and society | Art -- PhilosophyDDC classification: 709.1732 LOC classification: N 72 .A56 | W39 2011
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Henri Lefebvre predicted that the future of art was urban. Art and the City adopts this statement as its cue, taking into account the performative and relational 'turns' of art in more recent times. The book portrays what may be at stake in the emerging triangulation of art, the city and the rights of citizens, concentrating particularly on their mutual contingencies. It goes on to develop approaches to writing about artworks from the point of view of the spectator's first-hand encounter with them in urban contexts. In exploring how artworks present themselves as a means by which to navigate and plot the city for a writing interlocutor, Nicolas Whybrow discusses diverse examples, representing three key modern modalities of urban arts practice. The first, walking, involves London works by Richard Wentworth, Francis Alys, Mark Wallinger and others. The second, "London Playing Fields, includes art by Antony Gormley, Mark Quinn and Carsten Holler. The third, cultural memory, Whybrow addresses through the controversial urban holocaust memorial sites of Peter Eisenman's memorial in Berlin and Rachel Whiteread's in Vienna.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 181-190) and index.