From Publishers Weekly For 10 years, from the mid-'80s to the mid-'90s, artist and designer Susan Bee and Mira Schor, a painter on the faculty of the Parsons School of Design, edited a magazine they had founded, devoted to "visual pleasure with a culturally activist edge." Bee and Schor have culled 40 of the mos

From Publishers Weekly For 10 years, from the mid-'80s to the mid-'90s, artist and designer Susan Bee and Mira Schor, a painter on the faculty of the Parsons School of Design, edited a magazine they had founded, devoted to "visual pleasure with a culturally activist edge." Bee and Schor have culled 40 of the most representative essays, reviews, critical forums, interviews and "musings" for M/E/A/N/I/N/G: An Anthology of Artists' Writings, Theory, and Criticism, which takes its name from their magazine. . Miller, Rackstraw Downes, Joanna Freuh, Jerry Saltz and many others weigh in. Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. The book makes for a fascinating snapshot of a transitional era in American art, one whose terms and preoccuThe stellar cast of contributing artists and art writers includes Nancy Spero, Richard Tuttle, David Humphrey, Thomas McEvilley, Laura Cottingham, Johanna Drucker, David Reed, Carolee Schneemann, Whitney Chadwick, Robert Storr, Leon Golub, Charles Bernstein, and Alison Knowles.This compelling and theoretically savvy collection will be of interest to artists, art historians, critics, and a general audience interested in the views of practicing artists.. M/E/A/N/I/N/G brings together essays and commentary by over a hundred artists, critics, and poets, culled from the art magazine of the same name. The editors—artists Susan Bee and Mira Schor—have selected the liveliest and most provocative pieces from the maverick magazine that bucked commercial gallery interests and media hype during its ten-year tenure (1986–96) to explore visual pleasure with a culturally activist edge.With its emphasis on artists’ perspectives of aesthetic and social issues, this anthology provides a unique opportunity to enter into the fray of the most hotly contested art issues of the past few decades: the visibility of women artists, sexualiI don't think you need to be of any religious affiliation to do so. Although some of the topics in the book have been implemented part of project 16, still it's a good book. There are a few true pros out there and David is on that Mt. Arrogance on the part of others, as well as politics and simple entrenched institutionalism put up barrier after barrier, ensuring that medical students would for years after continue delivering babies after handling cadavers (the practice which was the primary problem at that hospital, and probably countless others worldwide). In 1935, Graham Greene, hoping to find the human "heart of darkness", embarked on an ambitious (foolhardy?) expedition into unmapped Liberia. This fifth edition has all the sketches in color. A good book though.. It is then that she begins to realize that the father she's admired her entire life isn't as honorable as she'd believed, for he is the one responsible for the horrors at the Colosseum.Then comes the day when a seemingly harmless prank lands Aurelia's beloved pet tiger and her secret love right into the dangerous depths of the Colosseum's arena to face Brute, the hungry and angry brother of Boots, in a fight to the death. Before that, they were not valued as food, but with the industrial revolution ca
- Title : M/E/A/N/I/N/G: An Anthology of Artists’ Writings, Theory, and Criticism
- Author : Brand: Duke University Press Books
- Rating : 4.77 (952 Vote)
- Publish : 2016-4-24
- Format : Paperback
- Pages : 496 Pages
- Asin : 0822325667
- Language : English


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