Space, Site, Intervention: Situating Installation Art

Front Cover
Erika Suderburg
U of Minnesota Press, 2000 - Art - 370 pages
From Ferdinand Chevel's Palais Ideal (1879-1905) and Simon Rodia's Watts Towers (1921-1954) to Ant Farm's Cadillac Ranch (1974) and Richard Serra's Tilted Arc (1981), installation art has continually crossed boundaries, encompassing sculpture, architecture, performance, and visual art. Although unique in its power to transform both the site in which a work is constructed and the viewer's experience of being in a place, installation art has not received the critical attention accorded other art forms.

In Space, Site, Intervention, some of today's most prominent art critics, curators, and artists view installation art as a diverse, multifaceted, and international art form that challenges institutional assumptions and narrow conceptual frameworks. The contributors discuss installation in relation to the genealogy of modern art, community and corporate space, multimedia cyberspace, public and private ritual, the gallery and the museum, public and private patronage, and political action. This ambitious volume focuses on issues of class, sexuality, cultural identity rase, and gender, and highlights a wide range of artists whose work is often marginalized by mainstream art history and criticism. Together, the essays in Space, Site, Intervention investigate how installation resonates within modern culture and society, as well as its ongoing influence on contemporary visual culture.

 

Contents

The Ruin as Dialect or Broken Classic
64
Installation and the Neobaroque
84
Garden Agon
100
How the Land Gained Site
130
The Interventionist Public and Performance Art of Asco
189
Six Motifs and Three Terms of Connoisseurship
220
An Assisted Commentary on Art RebateArte Reembolso
236
Video and Film Space
252
The Machine in the Museum or The Seventh Art in Search of Authorization
263
Structure Movement and the Dystopic in Diana Thaters China
275
The Memory Machines of Jim Campbell
287
The Closet the Warehouse the Lesbian as Artifact
297
Contributors
347
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About the author (2000)

Erika Suderburg is professor of art at the University of California, Riverside, and coeditor (with Michael Renov) of Resolutions: Contemporary Video Practice, also published by the University of Minnesota Press.

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