Ruins is an anthology in the series Documents of Contemporary Art, edited and with a 5,000-word introductory essay by Dillon. The original claim made here concerns the future orientation of the ruin, and contemporary artists’ deployment of it as a speculative rather than retrospective or melancholy form. It collects writings on ruin from contemporary artists, critics, philosophers, novelists and other historical sources, and demonstrates for the first time in such depth the extent of historical interest in ruins in the art of recent decades. Artists and writers include: Walter Benjamin, Robert Smithson, J. G. Ballard, Paul Virilio, Tacita Dean, Gerard Byrne, Chris Marker, Jane & Louise Wilson and the Otolith Group. The originality of the se...
The main question of the essay is: do ruins need a new definition? Ruins are not only destroyed arch...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record...
What explains the global proliferation of interest in ruins? Can ruins be understood beyond their co...
© 2014 Darren WardleThis practice‐led research investigates philosophical and aesthetic ideas surrou...
Sanctuary is the first published outcome of an AHRC Research Fellowship in the Creative and Performi...
The contemporary landscape is rife with ruins, from circumscribed tourist attractions to urban decay...
The ruin lies in ruins. Brian Dillon, co-curator of Tate Britain’s Ruin Lust exhibition, admits as m...
Màster universitari en Estudis Avançats en Arquitectura - Contemporary ProjectThroughout history, th...
PERFORMANCE RESEARCH VOLUME 20 ISSUE 3 On Ruins and Ruination Issue editors: Carl Lavery and Richa...
Azeville, Ruin Lust Exhibition, 4 March-18 May 2014, Tate Britain, LondonRuin Lust, an exhibition at...
Cover/feature article on contemporary artists using ruins in their work, among them Jeremy Deller, U...
This studio-based project seeks to challenge the picturesque conventions governing the depiction of ...
My work is a tribute to the disintegration of built environments, and the chaos and disturbance that...
Ruins can be invaluable relics, decorative follies or problematic garbage in cities. Many people see...
We can see ruins as objects that have a foot in three different times: the past, the present, and th...
The main question of the essay is: do ruins need a new definition? Ruins are not only destroyed arch...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record...
What explains the global proliferation of interest in ruins? Can ruins be understood beyond their co...
© 2014 Darren WardleThis practice‐led research investigates philosophical and aesthetic ideas surrou...
Sanctuary is the first published outcome of an AHRC Research Fellowship in the Creative and Performi...
The contemporary landscape is rife with ruins, from circumscribed tourist attractions to urban decay...
The ruin lies in ruins. Brian Dillon, co-curator of Tate Britain’s Ruin Lust exhibition, admits as m...
Màster universitari en Estudis Avançats en Arquitectura - Contemporary ProjectThroughout history, th...
PERFORMANCE RESEARCH VOLUME 20 ISSUE 3 On Ruins and Ruination Issue editors: Carl Lavery and Richa...
Azeville, Ruin Lust Exhibition, 4 March-18 May 2014, Tate Britain, LondonRuin Lust, an exhibition at...
Cover/feature article on contemporary artists using ruins in their work, among them Jeremy Deller, U...
This studio-based project seeks to challenge the picturesque conventions governing the depiction of ...
My work is a tribute to the disintegration of built environments, and the chaos and disturbance that...
Ruins can be invaluable relics, decorative follies or problematic garbage in cities. Many people see...
We can see ruins as objects that have a foot in three different times: the past, the present, and th...
The main question of the essay is: do ruins need a new definition? Ruins are not only destroyed arch...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record...
What explains the global proliferation of interest in ruins? Can ruins be understood beyond their co...