Do it : the compendium. edited by Hans Ulrich Obrist ; in collaboration with Independent Curators International.
Language: English Publication details: New York, NY : Independent Curators International ; Distributed Art Publishers 2013. Description: 448 p. : ill. : rnksz ; 26 cmISBN: 9781938922015Subject(s): Art, Modern--21st century--Exhibitions | Art, Modern--20st century--Exhibitions | Interactive art--Exhibitions | Conceptual art--ExhibitionsLOC classification: N 6494 .C63 D653 2013Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Vitali Hakko Kreatif Endüstriler Kütüphanesi | N 6494 .C63 D653 2013 | Not for loan | 011884 |
Sheet of colored stickers loosely inserted.
Dizin (s. 437) var.
Foreword and acknowledgments / Kate Fowle, Frances Wu Giarratano -- Introduction / Hans Ulrich Obrist -- Art by instruction and the pre-history of do it / Bruce Altshuler -- Progress report / Kate Fowle, Hans Ulrich Obrist -- Artist instructions / Artists A-Z -- Essay and interviews -- Do it at TEOR/éTica / Virginia Pérez-Ratton -- Why do it Chinese version? / Hu Fang, Hans Ulrich Obrist -- The evolution of do it / Elizabeth Presa, Hans Ulrich Obrist -- Appendix: list of venues, artist index.
Curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist, 'Do It' began in Paris in 1993 as a conversation between the artists Christian Boltanski and Bertrand Lavier and Obrist himself, who was experimenting with how exhibition formats could be rendered more flexible and open-ended. The discussion led to the question of whether a show could take "scores" or written instructions by artists as a point of departure, which could be interpreted anew each time they were enacted. To test the idea, Obrist invited 13 artists to send instructions, which were then translated into nine different languages and circulated internationally as a book. Within two years, 'Do It' exhibitions were being created all over the world by realizing the artists' instructions. With every version of the exhibition new instructions were added, so that today more than 300 artists have contributed to the project.