Philippe Parreno


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Contemporary Art and the Digitization of Everyday Life


Contemporary Art and the Digitization of Everyday Life

Author: Janet Kraynak

language: en

Publisher: University of California Press

Release Date: 2020-11-10


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Digitization is the animating force of everyday life. Rather than defining it as a technology or a medium, Contemporary Art and the Digitization of Everyday Life argues that digitization is a socio-historical process that is contributing to the erosion of democracy and an increase in political inequality, specifically along racial, ethnic, and gender lines. Taking a historical approach, Janet Kraynak finds that the seeds of these developments are paradoxically related to the ideology of digital utopianism that emerged in the late 1960s with the rise of a social model of computing, a set of beliefs furthered by the neo-liberal tech ideology in the 1990s, and the popularization of networked computing. The result of this ongoing cultural worldview, which dovetails with the principles of progressive artistic strategies of the past, is a critical blindness in art historical discourse that ultimately compromises art’s historically important role in furthering radical democratic aims.

Comic Abstraction


Comic Abstraction

Author: Roxana Marcoci

language: en

Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art

Release Date: 2007


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Foreword by Glenn D. Lowry. Text by Roxana Marcoci.

Pierre Huyghe


Pierre Huyghe

Author: André Rottmann

language: en

Publisher: MIT Press

Release Date: 2026-04-21


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The first collection of critical writings on the work of the influential contemporary French artist Pierre Huyghe. Influenced by wide-ranging ideas from land art and institutional critique to experimental cinematic practices and narrative film, the groundbreaking work of Pierre Huyghe since the early 1990s has arguably, even indelibly, altered the landscape of contemporary art. The French artist works at the beguiling intersection of fiction and reality, representation and performance, spectacle and memory, chance and agency, living organisms and technological entities. As formats and discourses of cinema (be it Godard or Lumet) and architecture, holidays (invented or existing) and games, (puppet) theater and opera, fairy tales and (travel) literature, museology and computer technology, life sciences and popular culture (like manga comics or Disney movies) are renegotiated in Huyghe’s variegated projects, the methods and modalities of producing, exposing, and experiencing art, in turn, come under both critical scrutiny and allegorical speculation. Essays and interviews by preeminent scholars, critics, and curators—including Benjamin Buchloh, David Joselit, and Molly Nesbit—trace the trajectory of Huyghe’s practice over the last three decades. You’ll find writing about the artist’s early engagement with the built environment, the temporalities of cinema and television, the customs of social communities, volatile property relations in global media culture, and his most recent and much-discussed ecological redefinitions of the objects and sites of art. These texts explore the far-reaching implications of Huyghe’s many seminal artworks for the history, theory, and ontology of art in the twenty-first century.