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Boris Groys

Autor de Art Power

80+ Obras 898 Miembros 6 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Boris Groys is Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies at New York University, Senior Research Fellow at the Academy of Design in Karlsruhe, Germany, and Professor at the European Graduate School in Saas Fee, Switzerland. He is the author of Art Power, History Becomes Form: Moscow Conceptualism mostrar más (both published by the MIT Press), and other books. mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: Boris Groys

Obras de Boris Groys

Art Power (2008) 95 copias
The Communist Postscript (2006) 73 copias
In the Flow (2016) 59 copias
Russian Cosmism (2018) 35 copias
Ilya Kabakov (1998) 29 copias
Peter Fischli David Weiss (1999) 24 copias
Philosophy of Care (2022) 19 copias
Chagall to Malevich : the Russian avant-gardes (2016) — Contribuidor — 11 copias
Discursive Museum, The (2002) 7 copias
Beat Streuli (1993) 7 copias
Total Enlightenment (2008) 6 copias
Cosmismo ruso (2021) 5 copias
Compossibilities (2013) 3 copias
Alexander Deyneka (2014) 3 copias
Politika poetiki (2012) 3 copias
Topologie der Kunst (2003) 3 copias
Filosofia de la cura (2023) 2 copias
Manifesta Journal (1/2/3) (2011) 2 copias
Perejaume: Des-Exhibit (1999) 2 copias
Die Erfindung Russlands (1995) 1 copia
Die Erfindung Russlands (2008) 1 copia
Arte em Fluxo 1 copia
Globus Cassus 1 copia
Logic of the Collection (2021) 1 copia
Kazimir Malevich (2014) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Francis Alÿs: A Story of Deception (2010) — Contribuidor — 41 copias
Stanley Kubrick : das Schweigen der Bilder (1993) — Prólogo, algunas ediciones2 copias

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Reseñas

Thought-provoking read, even if it suffers from a mix of over-complex and pretentious passages where the author seems to have the right interpretation for everything.
 
Denunciada
d.v. | 2 reseñas más. | May 16, 2023 |
Limited art criticism by Groys that takes well-documented examples (Broodthaers, Duchamp) and uses them as examples for the formation of new thinking in art. Much of this theory echoes art criticism from the 1990s and introduces very little in the line of new ideas. Some thoughts on technology begin in the early chapters but are not fully explored later. Disappointing, as I have read high praise of Groys and have not yet enjoyed any of his writing.
 
Denunciada
ephemeral_future | 2 reseñas más. | Aug 20, 2020 |
A theoretical book on the idea of 'new' in art is something that is ironically not very new anymore. Written in the early 1990s (like many books on this topic), the theories here have been surpassed but there is still value in some arguments on the idea of how value is applied to new artistic objects, unfortunately using tried-and-tested art examples like Cindy Sherman and Marcel Duchamps. The book does not rely on jargon, but the writing style is difficult at times; I enjoyed the structure and some of the arguments, but got little enjoyment from reading Groys' book. His recent papers on technology-led art are much more enjoyable and extremely interesting.… (más)
 
Denunciada
ephemeral_future | Aug 20, 2020 |
I was interested in a communist philosopher's take on post-communism. I hope this isn't the best attempt. Some gems:

'The struggle between these positions [marking left and right of party] determined the life of the country for a considerable period until the general line, represented by Stalin, won out at the beginning of the 1930s, whereupon left and right deviationists were liquidated over the course of the decade. '

'were liquidated', like a mattress you don't want.

'Thus Stalinist communism proves finally to be a revival of the Platonic dream of the kingdom of the philosphers, those who operate by means of language alone. In the Platonic state, the language of the philosophers is converted into direct violence by the class of guardians. This violence holds the state together. The Stalinist state was no different. It was the state apparatuses that translated the language of the philosopher into action - and, as is common knowledge, this translation was exceedingly brutal, incessantly brutal. Nevertheless, this remains a case of rule by language, for the sole means by which the philosopher could compel these apparatuses to listen to him and act in the name of the whole were those of language.'

I'm not sure who that passage shortchanges more, the Greeks, Chekists, or Gulag guards. We all cower to the middle of the night knock of a philosopher's language. Guffaw.

'On the one hand, sub-atomic particles are primary because all matter is made up of them. But in relation to finance they are secondary, because the greater the acceleration that releases the sub-atomic particles are discovered - and the size of the particle accelerator depends entirely upon its finance.'

Yes, the existence of quarks and muons in stars billions of miles away billions of years ago are completely dependent upon human government finance. Idiot.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
kcshankd | Dec 30, 2016 |

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Obras
80
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Miembros
898
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Valoración
3.8
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