Parkett Vol. 42 - 1994 | Lawrence Weiner, Rachel Whiteread
Lawrence Weiner
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Rachel Whiteread
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Insert: Nan Goldin (PDF)
Spine: Christian Marclay
Cumulus:
Art and the dimensions of words by Guy Brett (PDF)
On writing and writing by hand as sensory experiences by Martha Fleming (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Robert Frank by Vince Leo (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
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Lawrence Weiner
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View edition
Rachel Whiteread
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Insert: Nan Goldin (PDF)
Spine: Christian Marclay
Cumulus:
Art and the dimensions of words by Guy Brett (PDF)
On writing and writing by hand as sensory experiences by Martha Fleming (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Robert Frank by Vince Leo (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
Please place your order through our distributor D.A.P. here.
Lawrence Weiner
Read a selected text (PDF)
View edition
Rachel Whiteread
Read a selected text (PDF)
View edition
Insert: Nan Goldin (PDF)
Spine: Christian Marclay
Cumulus:
Art and the dimensions of words by Guy Brett (PDF)
On writing and writing by hand as sensory experiences by Martha Fleming (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Robert Frank by Vince Leo (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
Please place your order through our distributor D.A.P. here.
Browse Selected Texts and more on the Collaboration Artists
Artist Insert
Editorial
This issue of PARKETT evokes the merger of art and life, not as it was propagated in the late sixties, but as an entity freed from the conspicuous involvement of the artist’s person. Nor is the artist free as a bird, à la Yves Klein’s leap into the void.
In the work of Weiner and Whiteread, “art and life” appear as an objective, tangible fusion, melted into a single body. Both artists have worked in public spaces, and faced the friction of public exposure. “I’ll be a tattoo on Rachel Whiteread’s structures,” Lawrence Weiner said when we suggested juxtaposing the two of them. Public opinion has been given a voice in this issue. An anti-aircraft tower from World War II that stands in the midst of Vienna bears an inscription by Weiner that is visible from afar: SMASHED TO PIECES (IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT). The personal responses of individuals to Weiner’s piece reveal an emotional spectrum that does not exclude indifference, while the intense reactions to Rachel Whiteread’s spectacular sculpture HOUSE demonstrate its powerful impact on the community.
By contrast, writer Vince Leo traces the shift of Robert Frank’s photographic oeuvre from public to private sphere: “In 1959 it must have looked as if the whole country was in the process of abandoning public space.” He goes on to observe that “privacy and image control, once the privilege of the rich, became a guiding force in all visual relations.”
Nan Goldin’s ardent, vital images of human vulnerability in the Insert cross those unwrit¬ten boundaries that have become the subject of the present issue of PARKETT.
Table of Content
Robert Frank: From Compromise to Collaboration by Vince Leo
Larence Weiner
Weiner’s Werkstätte by Brooks Adams
Providing Metaphor Needs : Lawrence Weiner’s Specific & General Works by Frances Richard
Public Freehold by Dieter Schwarz
The Meaning that Comes Away from the Work of Art by Daniela Salvioni
Inquiry: Smashed Pieces (In the Still of the Night)
But Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? by Lane Relya
Vers les Etoiles by Edward Leffingwell
Rachel Whiteread
Rachel Whiteread: Separation Anxiety and the Art of Release by Neville Wakefield
Whiteread’s Ghost by Trevor Fairbrother
The Curbed Monumentality of the Invsible by Rudolf Schmitz
About the HOUSE by Simon Watney
Nan Goldin, Insert
Cursive by Ingrid Schaffner
Recent Sculptures of Markus Raetz – On the Subject of Metamorphoses, Les Infos du Paradis by Claude Ritschard
New Measures, Cumulus from Europe by Guy Brett
The Spirit & The Letter & The Evil Eye, Cumulus from America by Martha Fleming
Intriguing Artists by Roberto Ohrt