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MARC Record from harvard_bibliographic_metadata

Record ID harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:189457501:2697
Source harvard_bibliographic_metadata
Download Link /show-records/harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:189457501:2697?format=raw

LEADER: 02697cam a2200361Ma 4500
001 013158825-7
005 20120426170434.0
008 110728s2011 enka bc 000 0 eng
020 $a1849760004
020 $a9781849760003
035 0 $aocn772397066
040 $aAU@$beng$cAU@$dTEF
050 4 $aN6490$b.I53 2011
082 04 $a700.411.2
245 04 $aThe indiscipline of painting :$bTate St. Ives, 8 October 2011-3 January 2012, Mead Gallery, Warwick Arts Centre, 14 January-10 March 2012 /$c[curated by Daniel Sturgis with Sarah Shalgosky and Martin Clark].
260 $aLondon :$bTate Gallery Publishing Ltd.,$c2011.
300 $a123 p. (some folded) :$bcol. ill. ;$c25 x 25 cm.
500 $aExhibition catalogue.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 00 $tThe indiscipline of painting /$rDaniel Sturgis --$tThe agility of abstraction /$rTerry R. Myers.
520 $aThe Indiscipline of Painting is an international group exhibition including works by forty-nine artists from the 1960s to now. Selected by British painter Daniel Sturgis, it considers how the languages of abstraction have remained urgent, relevant and critical as they have been revisited and reinvented by subsequent generations of artists over the last 50 years. It goes on to demonstrate the way in which the history and legacy of abstract painting continues to inspire artists working today. The contemporary position of abstract painting is problematic. It can be seen to be synonymous with a modernist moment that has long since passed, and an ideology which led the medium to stagnate in self-reflexivity and ideas of historical progression. The Indiscipline of Painting challenges such assumptions. It reveals how painting's modernist histories, languages and positions have continued to provoke ongoing dialogues with contemporary practitioners, even as painting's decline and death has been routinely and erroneously declared. The show brings together works by British, American and European artists made over the last five decades and features major new commissions and loans. It includes important works by Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, Gerhard Richter and Bridget Riley alongside other lesser known artists such as Tomma Abts, Martin Barré, Mary Heilmann and Jeremy Moon.
650 0 $aArt, Abstract$vExhibitions.
650 0 $aPainting, Modern$y20th century$vExhibitions.
650 0 $aPainting, Modern$y21st century$vExhibitions.
700 1 $aClark, Martin,$d1976-
700 1 $aShalgosky, Sarah.
700 1 $aSturgis, Dan.
710 2 $aMead Gallery.
710 2 $aTate Gallery St Ives.
899 $a415_565634
988 $a20120420
049 $aHLSS
906 $0OCLC