"Ask Somebody Else Something Else": Analyzing the Artist Interview
We conceived this selection of papers in part because we both rely frequently and heavily on the artist interview in our own work, which is primarily on postwar American artists. The phenomenon of the artist interview-not quite document, not quite literature, not quite propaganda, not quite staged v...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Art journal (New York. 1960) 2005-09, Vol.64 (3), p.46-49 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We conceived this selection of papers in part because we both rely frequently and heavily on the artist interview in our own work, which is primarily on postwar American artists. The phenomenon of the artist interview-not quite document, not quite literature, not quite propaganda, not quite staged voyeurism, not quite entertainment, not quite verifiable fact-has become increasingly compelling within the context of so-called modern and postmodern production and theorization. It seems to embody a kind of supplementary economy, at once extending the purview of the autonomous art object and simultaneously revealing that any such notion of autonomy is always already a fiction. In addition, the artist interview seems clearly designed to bring the figure of the artist into direct consideration when looking at or thinking through the implications-formal and historical-of any artwork, an impulse very much in tension with prevailing suspicions that warn against linking art with its makers' intentions or biographies. |
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ISSN: | 0004-3249 2325-5307 |
DOI: | 10.1080/00043249.2005.10792837 |