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Crosscurrents at Century's End
A Neuberger Berman Art Collection:
This selection of art since 1990 is drawn from a collection of approximately 600 works (54 artists are represented.) that reflect various directions emerging in todays art.
The focus is on particular works of art rather than representations of a movement or direction.
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Drawing Now contains more than 100 color reproductions of work by 26 international artists, both well-known and emerging, demonstrating the variety of methods and approaches, mediums and scales, apparent in this old-again, new-again art.
Drawing Now was published to accompany the first major survey of contemporary drawings at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 15 years. |
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| ESSAYS & OVERVIEWS |
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| POLITICS, PHILOSOPY and COMMENTARIES |
About
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| Found at Amazon.com |
Art Held Hostage reveals the messy inside story about the most infamous world-class art museum that youve probably never heard of. ..an investigation into a truly American tale of power, litigiousness, and boardroom antics.
A book for those interested in the dark underbelly of the business side of the art world." --( J.P. Cohen)
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True Colors: The Real Life of the Art World
The most honest account to be found of the fashionable, fabulous, and often ugly New York art world of the last quarter century.
For the first time visual artists came fully under the glare of the media and evolved into pop cultural figures.
Revealing anecdotes (and gossip) offer a sense of how the art world really works, its politics, its scene, and how artists survive in it or not. Sometimes hilarious, sometimes scathing. |
Most Art Sucks: Five Years of Coagula
"what most impressed me was that I easily understood the essays, but none of them sacraficed intelligence (or humor) to make their point.
The ease at which the Coagula writers discuss sophisticated art and artists is the true gem of this book, despite its being packaged as a gossip sheet rewind. Nobody here is trying to sound intelligent, they already are and aim their brains at the despicable cretins controlling art careers and museums." (Reader Reviewer, West coast 12/25/03) |
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