Sarah Sze: Triple Point
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.60 (960 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0982681380 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 160 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-03-26 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
This catalogue documents Triple Point, her commission for the US pavilion at the 2013 Venice Biennale, which conjures a series of vocational arenas (such as a planetarium, a laboratory, a tinkerer’s workshop) and references observational tools like pendulums, compasses, and weather vanes. From Bookforum At the forefront of contemporary-art explorations of stuff-after-stuff-after-stuff, Sarah Sze creates exquisitely conceived and executed installations. —Julia Bryan-Wilson . Utilizing the ordinary things of everyday life (toothpicks, Q-tips, ladders), Sze produces great gravity-defying masses and immersive site-specific environments that wholly reconfigure their locations
Included is a conversation between the artist and Pulitzer Prize winning author Jennifer Egan, along with a short story by Egan entitled “Black Box.” Curator and scholar Johanna Burton contributes a compelling new examination of Sze’s practice, and 2013 Biennale Co-Commissioners Holly Block and Carey Lovelace provide an introduction to the project and artist. Elegantly realized by award-winning designer Takaaki Matsumoto, Sarah Sze: Triple Point is certain to be a lasting testament to the continued development of this exciting and original artist.. Often every crevice of an architectural space is utilized in her complex constructions, composed of thousands of objects, works that converge at the intersecti
Montaff said A small book for large installations. It breaks up photos of large works into several pages, but does offer some photos of details. There is a A small book for large installations Montaff It breaks up photos of large works into several pages, but does offer some photos of details. There is a 40 page conversation with some writer that I found irrelevant, for the most part. I think Sze's work is much better represented in other books.. 0 page conversation with some writer that I found irrelevant, for the most part. I think Sze's work is much better represented in other books.