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$26.95
Jun 11, 2024 | ISBN 9781804292884
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Jun 11, 2024 | ISBN 9781804292891
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Praise
“Today, the most contemporary art form could be called cancelism. Cancelism as an art historical genre reflects the global shift to populism, disinformation and polarization. Cancelism is anonymous, crowd based, ubiquitous, it privileges affect over analysis, it goes beyond traditional understandings of left and right. In her lucid analysis, Claire Bishop traces some of the historical developments that led to this situation: the futurist glorification of disruption, countercultural interventions based on the model of coup d´états, artivist decisionism – different threads through which disruption and transgression were consolidated as key modes of production from Silicon Valley to Pussy Riot. For anyone who wants to understand how art functions in the age of populism, Bishops book is an indispensable guide.”
—Hito Steyerl, author of Duty Free Art
“In Disordered Attention, Claire Bishop continues her careful and astute examination of the centrality of performance in contemporary art initiated in the now classic Artificial Hells. Guaranteed to become a fundamental reference, Disordered Attention offers its readers not only a survey of some of the most significant works in very recent performance and visual arts but it advances a whole new theory of spectatorship for the age of social media. Bishop shows us how our techno-mediated modes of experiencing art today transform the very social and material status of the artworks under review — which endure a surprising metamorphosis thanks to Bishop’s sharp analysis and clear prose.”
—André Lepecki, Professor, Department of Performance Studies, New York University
“We know how to concentrate our attention on the artworks that remain unchanged in time. But what does it mean to be attentive to the time-based art – performances, research practices or interventions? They cannot be grasped at one glance and, thus, seem to escape our attention. In her brilliantly written book Claire Bishop analyses the problems with contemporary spectatorship. It is a book not only for the specialists but for everybody who wants to look at contemporary art but does not know how to do it.'”
—Boris Groys, author of The Philosophy of Care
“Bishop is that rare art historian who looks at contemporary art and performance, and whose perception of each is fully informed by the other. That she is able to weave brief histories of theater, dance, visual art, technology, and spectatorship into four highly readable essays, and the places and spaces where they intersect -with her first foray into current architecture – makes this book an important contribution to the new art history of the 21st century.”
—RoseLee Goldberg Director and Chief Curator of Performa, author of Performance: Live Art for the 21st Century
“Claire Bishop is one of contemporary art’s most skilled diagnosticians, and with Disordered Attention she zeroes in, and makes sense of, distraction. This book is destined to become a cultural touchstone.”
—Julia Bryan-Wilson, professor of contemporary art at Columbia University
“A thought-provoking book on creation and viewership.”
—Jessica White, i-D
“[A] deft examination of post-1990s contemporary art … pushing back against the trend for anxious denunciations of growing inattention.”
—J.J. Charlesworth, ArtReview
“Full of clear, crisp insights that helps us understand the obvious yet surprising impact technology has had on art.”
—Nicholas Burman, CLOT Magazine
“Bishop posits that our phones have become a kind of ‘prosthesis for viewing’ art, and her book is about how artists are responding to this new normal.”
—Emily Watlington, Art in America
“Illuminating…an erudite foray into the messy meeting place between art and technology in the 21st century.”
—Publishers Weekly
Table Of Contents
Introduction: OS XXI, Disordering Attention
1 Research-Based Art: Information Overload
2 Performance Exhibitions: Black Box, White Cube, Grey Zone
3 Interventions: Seizing the Moment
4 Invocations: Contemporary Art Quotes Modernist Architecture
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Notes
Illustration Credits
Index
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
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