Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#05076

East Art Map, Contemporary Art and Eastern Europe

Date
2006
Publisher
Afterall Books
Format
Artists' Books
Details
Softcover
Size
19 × 24.7 × 5 cm
Length
525 
Description

The artistic map of Europe contains different degrees of detail and resolution. Italy, France, and Spain are presented in fine grain, but the Balkan peninsula is little more than a vague outline. England, Germany, and Scandinavia have many features filled in, but to the east of Germany things are blurred. Until recently, cities like Sofia, Odessa, Skopje, and Belgrade had next to no definition. Further to the East, Moscow comes into focus, but this is no compensation for the Baltics, sentenced for the last half-century to blank space.

In the West, virtually every move of the artist, the art market, and the art public is documented. But in Eastern Europe, no such system of documentation or communication exists. Instead, we encounter systems that are not only inaccessible to the West, but incongruous from one country to the next. Beside the official art histories there is often a whole series of stories and legends about “unofficial,” unapproved art and artists. East Art Map: Contemporary Art and Eastern Europe is an ambitious attempt to reconstruct the missing histories of contemporary art in Eastern Europe from an East European and artistic perspective. It is perhaps the widest ranging art documentation project ever undertaken by the East on the East, involving a large network of artists, scholars, curators and critics coordinated by the IRWIN group over several years.

The editors invited eminent art critics, curators, and artists to present up to ten crucial art projects produced in their respective countries over the past 50 years. The choice of the particular artworks (many of them reproduced in color), artists, and events, as well as their presentation, was left exclusively to the individual selectors. In addition, the editors asked experts from both East and West to provide longer texts offering cross-cultural perspectives on the art of both regions.

 

Related Items

  1. The Global Contemporary and the Rise of New Art Worlds
  2. Igor Zabel: Contemporary Art Theory
  3. Il Piedistallo Vuoto / The Empty Pedestal
  4. Sonja Ivekovic and Ruth Noack: Sanja Ivekovic: Triangle
  5. Bas Jan Ader and Jan Verwoert: Bas Jan Ader: In Search of the Miraculous
  6. Making Art Global, Part 1

The Third Havana Biennial 1989
  7. Andrew Dadson: Visible Heavens from 1850 - 2008
  8. Kodwo Eshun and Dan Graham: Dan Graham: Rock My Religion
  9. Wiels!
  10. Anna Dezeuze and Thomas Hirschhorn: Thomas Hirschhorn: Deleuze Monument
  11. Peter Fischli, Jeremy Millar, and David Weiss: Fischli and Weiss: The Way Things Go
  12. Ulrike Grosswarth: Ulrike Grossarth: Fabrics from Lublin
  13. Ben Branagan: DOGGERLAND
  14. Péter György: The Two Kassels
  15. Leon Qu: Glass
  16. txtrapolis: Contemporary Text-Based Art from Singapore
  17. Bernhard Cella: and . learning english has no use
  18. Sarah Browne: How to Use Fool’s Gold
  19. Sean Landers, Art, Life and God
  20. Art Spiegelman  and Robert Coover: Street Cop
  21. Paulette Phillips: Activating the Archive 5: The Mississippi Tapes
  22. Love Poems for Ceres
  23. Kevin Immanuel: Michel Foucault Letters
  24. Bernhard Cella: Travel Journal
  25. Scull’s Angles
  26. Kasper Andreasen: Off The Map
  27. Noah Lyon: ARTFORMULA #1 : All Your Favorite Artists
  28. David Askevold and Christina Ritchie: Activating the Archive 4: Double Agent
  29. Jessica Williams: Diary
  30. Kay Higgins, Myfanwy MacLeod, and Lisa Robertson: The Undesirables
  31. Marit Paasche: Lives & Videotapes
  32. Anna Dezeuze: Thomas Hirschhorn: Deleuze Monument (Hardcover)
  33. Institutions by Artists, Volume One
  34. Keren Cytter
  35. Sandra Rechico: whereabouts