Doris Salcedo; a Colombian-born artist; addresses the politics of memory and forgetting in work that embraces fraught situations in dangerous places. Noted critic and theorist Mieke Bal narrates between the disciplines of contemporary culture in order to boldly reimagine the role of the visual arts. Both women are pathbreaking figures; globally renowned and widely respected. Doris Salcedo; meet Mieke Bal.In Of What One Cannot Speak; Bal leads us into intimate encounters with Salcedorsquo;s art; encouraging us to consider each work as a ldquo;theoretical objectrdquo; that invitesmdash;and demandsmdash;certain kinds of considerations about history; death; erasure; and grief. Bal ranges widely through Salcedorsquo;s work; from Salcedorsquo;s Atrabiliarios seriesmdash;in which the artist uses worn shoes to retrace los desaparecidos (ldquo;the disappearedrdquo;) from nations like Argentina; Chile; and Colombiamdash;to Shibboleth; Salcedorsquo;s once-in-a-lifetime commission by the Tate Modern; for which she created a rupture; as if by earthquake; that stretched the length of the museum hallrsquo;s concrete floor. In each instance; Salcedorsquo;s installations speak for themselves; utilizing household items; human bones; and common domestic architecture to explore the silent spaces between violence; trauma; and identity. Yet Bal draws out even deeper responses to the work; questioning the nature of political art altogether and introducing concepts of metaphor; time; and space in order to contend with Salcedorsquo;s powerful sculptures and installations.An unforgettable fusion of art and essay; Of What One Cannot Speak takes us to the very core of events we are capable of rememberingmdash;yet still uncomfortably cannot speak aloud.
#1395916 in eBooks 2011-01-04 2011-01-04File Name: B00541YJLG
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Make a third edition please!By matty creenI just reread this for the third time and its desperately in need of a new edition. I think people like Kate Nash and the gals from Bleached could make some great contributions.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great book with phenomenal insight into ways talent fights (and ...By John-Aaron RuddickGreat book with phenomenal insight into ways talent fights (and sometimes brawls) to balance the struggles and impetus behind massive creativity with the need for functionality and balance in the lay world. Interesting. Includes practical applications interspersed with the art of contributors.10 of 10 people found the following review helpful. How Women Survive via Creative. Not Always Pleasant. MeansBy Rachel Kramer BusselLive Through This is a revolutionary. powerful. and potentially life-saving book. Its not just that editor Sabrina Chapadjiev has collected the work of some of the most creative female artists and writers. but that they in turn bravely take us behind the scenes to moments often before they became the bold-faced names they are today and share their darkest times and coping mechanisms.The fact is. its often hard to reconcile the women writing these pieces with what I know of them. Exhibitionism for the Shy and Live Nude Girl author Carol Queen was really once going to kill herself? And yet of course it all makes perfect sense. These women give readers an outlet not just to hear their stories. but to claim our own coping mechanisms without judgment. Its not that they are encouraging cutting or eating disorders. to name two examples. but that theyve been there. done/heard that. and have moved on. Nicole Blackman writes of the power she unwittingly tapped into. becoming the keeper of her fans secrets. and not knowing how to deal with such pain in their lives.Elizabeth Stephens and Annie Sprinkle write of turning cancer. a deadly disease. into art. in one of the most powerful pieces in the book. Within these pages. everything is okay. if thats what you need to do to survive. as Kate Bornstein so eloquently points out: "Cutting. starving yourself. drugging. drinking... these are all rituals some of us develop in order to deal with pain. Each of these solutions to pain is in itself painful. so each solution/ritual contains a very personal lesson on how to handle the experience of pain." Her journey took her through Scientology and into art. among other things. and the stark examples of her artwork say so much about the pain she was living through.I dont think its a coincidence that as I read this book while I was going through a very dark time. dealing with depression and anxiety. I read part of it during a medical crisis as I sat in the waiting room. Because thats another thing: even though this is a book about getting past those self-destructive. self-defeating. awful mental (and physical) struggles. these authors dont hold out any panaceas or claim to be completely "over" these issues. They have certainly learned and matured. but this is not just an "and I lived to tell the tale" book. Its much more than that. because one gets the sense that though they may have stopped drinking. getting high. and outright harming themselves. the challenges continue. Inga M. Muscios essay is the kind that grabs your heart and holds tight until the end as she rights about the death of her brother. She concludes. "Most always. healing is not a destination or an objective. Healing is a daily thought process. a series of infinite questions and choices. a kill that is not taught. much less revered. in our culture."I dont mean to end on a depressing note. because I do believe this book is well worth reading for anyone. whatever gender. who has ever felt not all there. who has wanted art to save them but isnt sure it will do the trick. who has felt. even if they were surrounded by people who care. all alone. These authors get that and go there. to those places so many would rather avoid or pretend do not exist. By acknowledging that they do. sharing their stories. and. most of all. perhaps. not pretending to have all the answers. they prove themselves not "experts." but real. flawed. passionate. yet still brilliant. bold and creative people who have learned not everything. but something they can pass on to others.