Parkett Vol. 72 - 2004 | Monica Bonvicini, Urs Fischer, Alex Katz, Richard Prince
Urs Fischer
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Alex Katz
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Richard Prince
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Monica Bonvicini
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Insert Loredana Sperini (PDF)
Cumulus
On sustainability by Stephanie Smith (PDF)
On Peter Regli by Hans Rudolf Reust (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Matthew Buckingham by Anselm Franke (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
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Urs Fischer
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Alex Katz
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Richard Prince
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Monica Bonvicini
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Insert Loredana Sperini (PDF)
Cumulus
On sustainability by Stephanie Smith (PDF)
On Peter Regli by Hans Rudolf Reust (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Matthew Buckingham by Anselm Franke (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
Please place your order through our distributor D.A.P. here.
Urs Fischer
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Alex Katz
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Richard Prince
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Monica Bonvicini
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View edition
Insert Loredana Sperini (PDF)
Cumulus
On sustainability by Stephanie Smith (PDF)
On Peter Regli by Hans Rudolf Reust (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Matthew Buckingham by Anselm Franke (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
It used to be a much-debated topic with a buzzword all its own: individual mythologies. The works of Monica Bonvicini, Alex Katz, Richard Prince, and Urs Fischer unmistakably demonstrate how fluid the exchange between collective and individual, between subculture, elitist culture and mainstream has become. But these artists also show that myths may be found and artistically enhanced in the most unexpected places. Also in this issue an Insert by Loredana Sperini.
In the last of the three essays on the subject of “(IM)MATERIAL?” commissioned in honor of Parkett’s 20-year anniversary, Boris Groys examines just how much the premises of art have changed. He observes that art has undergone a “retechnization” which is both material and work intensive—a development paradoxically sparked by supposedly immaterial computer and video art. Groys is also interested in how the myth of immaterially formed artistic decisions has evolved since Duchamp’s readymade.
In stunningly trenchant, folklorically embroidered images, Urs Fischer makes the life of the artist tangible through allusions to his “studio existence.” He creates chairs that conjure up the spirit of Bruce Nauman and cast materialized shadows which are as heavy as iron. In his Edition for Parkett, a sculptural rendition of a magician’s hand pulling a rabbit out of a top hat, it seems as if far-reaching forces have charmed the myth of artistic creation, discussed by Groys, into material and visual form. The Editions seem to communicate with each other especially well in this issue of Parkett. Richard Prince’s photo edition evokes the mythic event that has come to represent an entire epoch: Woodstock. He has appended a short text describing how and why he attended that legendary concert in 1969 with only one exposure in his camera. Now, 35 years later, Prince has decided to print and present this photograph to the readers of Parkett. A personal story is thus superimposed on the myth of Woodstock by an artist who has become part of that very culture which he and his specific generation shaped (impressively described in the essay by his friend Dike Blair).
The Editions of Monica Bonvicini and Alex Katz also make reference to earlier and now iconic works. In DRILL 4 CHASTITY, Monica Bonvicini revives and reinterprets Duchamp’s multiple, WEDGE OF CHASTITY (1954), a bronze wedge in dental plastic, which he gave his wife Teeny as a wedding present. Juliane Rebentisch speaks of Monica Bonvicini’s “meta-fetishistic objects.” But what happens when such an object resonates with one of the ur-fetishes of that great eroticist of the avant-garde? The visual blend of sex and art object acquires an undeniable potency as a refined miniature drill that has laid itself to rest.
Alex Katz’s picture of his dog, SUNNY (1971), is one of his best-known works. He has now created a metal cutout onto which the motif has been silkscreened—as if the dog were jumping towards us out of the picture and the depths of time.
Parkett has set itself the goal of analyzing and disseminating art. We are especially pleased, at the end of this extensively celebrated anniversary year, to be able to present such a sharp-witted bouquet of artistic selfreflection.
Table of Content
Matthew Buckingham by Anselm Franke
20 Years of Parkett
Essay by Boris Groys, 2 interviews with Alex Katz by Ena Swansea and Bruce Hainley
Monica Bonvincini
Monica Bonvincini’s Fetish Art by Juliane Rebentisch
Crash Course in Architectural Matter by Lars Lerup
Secrets of Sentence Building by Jörg Heiser
Urs Fischer
Postcard from America – Down the Rabbit-Hole in Zurich by Brenda Richardson
Wanted to turn the music on but itw as already playing by Beatrix Ruf
Garden of Earthly Hates by Benjamin Weissman
Richard Prince
A Reflection or Two by Dike Blair
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Joke (Painting) by Douglas Fogle
Richard Prince’s Second House by Alison M. Gingeras
Richaard Prince – A Reader by Vincent Pécoil
Loredana Sperini, Insert
Wind and Fire Rising Within – Silvie Defraoui by Daniel Kurjakovic
Variations on a Theme – Christina Jankowski by Marc Glöde
Promise Pieces, Cumulus from America by Stephanie Smith
Global Scrabble, Cumulus from Europe by Hans Rudolf Reust