Parkett Vol. 77 - 2006 | Trisha Donnelly, Carsten Höller, Rudolf Stingel
Trisha Donnelly
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Carsten Höller
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Rudolf Stingel
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Insert: Beth Coleman/Howard Goldkrand (PDF)
Spine: Koo Jeong-A
Cumulus:
On experiencing art by Ali Subotnik (PDF)
On curating by Tirdad Zolghadr (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Chirsopher Williams by Christian Rattemeyer (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
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Trisha Donnelly
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Carsten Höller
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Rudolf Stingel
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Insert: Beth Coleman/Howard Goldkrand (PDF)
Spine: Koo Jeong-A
Cumulus:
On experiencing art by Ali Subotnik (PDF)
On curating by Tirdad Zolghadr (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Chirsopher Williams by Christian Rattemeyer (PDF)
U.S. & Canada
Please place your order through our distributor D.A.P. here.
Trisha Donnelly
Read a selected text (PDF)
View edition
Carsten Höller
Read a selected text (PDF)
View edition
Rudolf Stingel
Read a selected text (PDF)
View edition
Insert: Beth Coleman/Howard Goldkrand (PDF)
Spine: Koo Jeong-A
Cumulus:
On experiencing art by Ali Subotnik (PDF)
On curating by Tirdad Zolghadr (PDF)
Miscellaneous:
Chirsopher Williams by Christian Rattemeyer (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
Despite the broad spectrum of jumping off points chosen by the artists in this issue of Parkett, they all share a recalcitrance that draws its energy from an involvement with uncertainty. There are some who describe Trisha Donnelly’s art as “hermetic” and Rudolf Stingel’s gestures in the space of art as “systematically confounding.” In contrast, Carsten Höller’s “Laboratory of Doubt” goes out into the world to spread doubt out of loudspeakers mounted on the roof of a car. But uncertainty need not be uncanny. A look at the cover—into and out of a room throbbing with contradictory connotations—suggests the exact opposite: liberation and festiveness.
The artists explore potentials. In a flipbook tucked away in the pages of this issue, Trisha Donnelly offers readers the possibility to expand their perception. Carsten Höller’s Edition for Parkett is a distorted image in the form of a sterling silver pendant that proves, on closer inspection, to be the anamorphosis of a car key. It is, in fact, the key to Höller’s laboratory on wheels. The artist rewards all those who recognize the decoded picture of the key in the cylinder with exclusively immaterial access to his laboratory.
Cay Sophie Rabinowitz describes Rudolf Stingel’s new self-portraits as “a body of work quite literally about being uncertain, an attempt to explore artistic self-doubt psychologically and graphically”. Seen in this light, the heightened feeling of self-worth inherent in Stingel’s Edition for Parkett, a golden ring with his monogram, might be interpreted as a foil to self-doubt. Wearers of this piece of jewelry become party to the intoxicating ambivalence of accentuating or obliterating identity.
Speaking about the gaps that inevitably appear in normality, Bruce Hainley writes, “Perhaps artists make something only to confront what cannot be understood”, while Beatrix Ruf describes the parallel realities that fill these in-betweens as “tempting the spirit”. Above all, the artists in this issue of Parkett show us that we cannot rely on anything, except perhaps on the ability of art to burgeon in the most hidden places and to emerge as the product of complete normality.
This volume also features an Insert project by Beth Coleman and Howard Goldkrand.
Table of Content
Grazia Toderi Infinite Entertrainment by Sergio Risaliti
Gerard Byrne: Once More, Without Feeling by Caoimhin Mac Giolla Léith
Carsten Höller
Would the Real Carten Höller Please Stand up? by Jessica Morgan
Uncommon Senses by Jennifer Allen
Carsten Höller and the Baudoin Experiment by Chantal Mouffe
Trisha Donnelly
Electricity by Laura Hoptman
Over and Out by Bruce Hainley
Schwa by Beatrix Ruf
Rudolf Stingel
Portrait of the Artist as a Self-Portrait by Cay Sophie Rabinowitz
Medium and Membrane by Jörg Heiser
Autobiography of a Painting by Francesco Bonami
Beth Coleman & Howard Goldkrand, Insert
You Clod You, I’ll Show You! Thinking About Erik Steinbrecher by Claudia Spinelli
Christopher Williams by Christian Rattemeyer
Happy Hour, Ernst F. Burckhardt, Max Ernst, Max Bill, Sigfried Giedion, Alvar Aalto and Corso-Dancing in Zürich, Les Infos du Paradis by Christoph Bignens
Back to Life, Cumulus from America by Ali Subotnick
Short Telling, Cumulus from Europe by Tirdad Zolghadr