Synopses & Reviews
The use of text can be seen in some of the most avant-garde artwork of the twentieth century; Rene´ Magritte used it as an instrument for Surrealist subversion when he inscribed his painting with the statement ?ceci n?est pas une pipe?, and Dadaist artists used it to describe anti-art and anti-aesthetic sentiment. The work of some of the most famous conceptual artists of the 1960s began, for the first time, to use written language as an artwork in itself, without juxtaposition with images. The book is structured in two parts: the first consists of essays on the subject. These include an essay setting the context of the medium?s development historically, an essay addressing the use of text in a contemporary context and the reasons for its relevance and proliferation today, and a reprint of a seminal text on the subject. The second part is a lavishly illustrated survey of artists who use text as an artistic medium and for whom it constitutes a major aspect of their work. Artists included Kasimir Malevich, Alexander Rodchenko, Tristan Tzara, Francis Picabia, Aleksandra Mir, Art and Language, BANK, Barbara Kruger, Bob and Roberta Smith, Bruce Nauman, Cy Twombly, Ed Ruscha, El Lissitzky, Fiona Banner, Freee, Gilbert and George, Grayson Perry, Guillaume Apollinaire, Hanne Darboven, Jason Rhoades, Jean- Michel Basquiat, Jenny Holzer, Jim Dine, John Baldessari, Joe Tilson, Joseph Beuys, Joseph Kosuth, Keith Arnatt, Kurt Schwitters, Lawrence Weiner, Rene´ Magritte, Mark Titchner, Mel Bochner, On Kawara, O¨yvind Fahlstro¨m, Peter Blake, Raymond Pettibon, Richard Artschwager, Richard Prince, Jasper Johns, Roni Horn, Roy Lichtenstein, Vito Acconci, Ugo Rondinone, Andy Warhol, Robert Indiana, Tracey Emin.
Synopsis
Art and Text covers the development of the textual medium in art from the early combinations of text, lettering and image in the work of seminal artists such as El Lissitzky and Kurt Schwitters, to its use in the present day.
The use of written language has been one of the most defining developments in visual art of the twentieth century. Art and Text is a unique and timely survey of this most contemporary and relevant artistic tool. The use of text can be seen in many of the twentieth centurys avant-garde artworks; René Magritte and the dadaists used it to describe anti-art and anti-aesthetic sentiment; and the work of many conceptual artists of the 1960s even began to use written language as an artwork in itself. Artists such as John Baldessari, Lawrence Weiner and Bruce Nauman—who remain some of the worlds most respected artists—helped push the boundaries of arts definition with text, and what constitutes art has continued to develop in response ever since.
Contemporary artists continue to use this medium and expand its possibilities, for example, as a most direct and immediate means of artistic expression, as in the work of Tracey Emin or Cy Twombly, or
an effective socio-political artistic mechanism, like in that of BANK, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Jenny Holzer.
About the Author
Dave Beech: Dave Beech is an artist in the collective Freee. He teaches at Chelsea College of Art and writes regularly for Art Monthly. He is the author of Beauty and co-author of The Philistine Controversy.
Charles Harrison: Professor Harrison was one of the leading art historians of his generation with an outstanding international research profile and record of prestigious research publications. He is the author of numerous publications including Art and its Criticism, and Introduction to Art.
Will Hill: Will Hill is Senior Lecturer in Graphic Design at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, prior to which he worked as a freelance designer, illustrator and typographer. He regularly writes for the St Bride's Printing Library journal Ultrabold and is the author of The Complete Typographer.