Formats
Anthologies
101
Audio
306
Catalogues
440
Clothing
23
Editions
30
Ephemera
75
Literary
37
Monographs
190
Posters
298
Video
39
Zines
144

Shop > Artists' Books

#11442

J'ai Froid

Price
$7.00
Date
2014
Publisher
Castillo/Corrales
Format
Artists' Books
Size
23 × 25.5 cm
Length
26 pages
Genre
, Essays, Conversations, , Contemporary Art
Description

Published on the aftermath of the exhibition “J’ai froid,” the fourth issue of castillo/corrales today comprises two essays and a dialogue, all dealing with oppositional strategies by cultural producers in Scandinavia. Through a reading of the work and practices of artists and black metal musicians, the publication reflects on the contentions of Scandinavian culture and the need to express angst and defiance, and to challenge the normative in society and art.

In the essay “Insider Art,” artist Sidsel Meineche Hansen reflects on the relation between the artist and the institution through the practice of artist and psychiatric patient, Ovartaci. “Three Notes of the Evolution of Nordic Transgression” is an essay by art historian Niels Henriksen that puts in relation different conceptions of the psyche and the myth, with Edvard Munch’s woodcut print technique, and Asger Jorn’s Scandinavian Institute for Comparative Vandalism. In a conversation titled, “Mediating Darkness,” curators Staffan Boije af Gennäs and Amelia Ishmael discuss the permeations of darkness in contemporary art and music, and the influence of black metal aesthetic.

Edition of 200.
Staple bound.
Black & white and color images.

  1. J’ai Froid
 

Related Items

  1. John Beeson: Relative Distance
  2. Clara Schulmann: Rien N’est Magique
  3. Robert Longo: Stand
  4. Michael Riedel: Oskar
  5. Joe Scanlan: RED FLAGS
  6. Trix + Robert Haussmann
  7. Lars Ahlstrom and Hans Anders Molin: Airspace
  8. David Askevold and Christina Ritchie: Activating the Archive 4: Double Agent
  9. Colin Campbell and Bruce ed. Ferguson: Activating the Archive 2: Otherwise Worldly
  10. Greg Curnoe: Blue Book no. 8
  11. Emily Vey Duke: I’d Rather be Polymorphous Perverse