This article proposes to reflect on the role of interviews with artists as a contention device in the interaction between two subjects, considering that the desire to apprehend works of art through their various ways turns the artist’s word into a privileged object. That can be seen by understanding the context of the 1960s/1970s, when a discursive dispute took place in the field of art as artists claim speech spaces. Artists’ words are not the truth about their works, since they are as historically, socially and culturally determined as the works themselves; therefore, interviews can be seen as mechanisms that open meaning-making and expand it in the crossing of internal and external views about artistic practice
Controversies concerning artistic representation have been part of the artistic arena and the public...
The concern about how art and artists converse with production systems is not recent. It dates back ...
The questions this thesis sought to answer are: How do artists perceive themselves as visual communi...
This article proposes to reflect on the role of interviews with artists as a contention device in th...
Nearly every exhibition catalogue now contains an interview with, or related statement by, the artis...
The article discusses the role of interviews throughout the history of art, especially from the 1950...
This thesis examines interviews with artists in Britain and the United States, mapping changes in t...
Based on the finding that the use of interviews in studies has been disseminated in the field of Art...
Speaking of Art contains eleven of my interviews with artists (comprising just over a quarter of the...
Given as part of a day-long panel of papers exploring the artist’s interview, this 20-minute paper c...
"Since it was founded in 1976 'Art Monthly' has consistently published interviews with leading conte...
This article examines the nature of the duologue between artist and creative source, as a lost inter...
THE ARTIST INTERVIEW AS A PLATFORM FOR NEGOTIATING AN ARTWORK’S POSSIBLE FUTURES The artist intervi...
Published in the name of Art & Language, the article considers the expansion of artistic and curator...
Published under the name of Art & Language, the article takes issue with prevailing accounts of the ...
Controversies concerning artistic representation have been part of the artistic arena and the public...
The concern about how art and artists converse with production systems is not recent. It dates back ...
The questions this thesis sought to answer are: How do artists perceive themselves as visual communi...
This article proposes to reflect on the role of interviews with artists as a contention device in th...
Nearly every exhibition catalogue now contains an interview with, or related statement by, the artis...
The article discusses the role of interviews throughout the history of art, especially from the 1950...
This thesis examines interviews with artists in Britain and the United States, mapping changes in t...
Based on the finding that the use of interviews in studies has been disseminated in the field of Art...
Speaking of Art contains eleven of my interviews with artists (comprising just over a quarter of the...
Given as part of a day-long panel of papers exploring the artist’s interview, this 20-minute paper c...
"Since it was founded in 1976 'Art Monthly' has consistently published interviews with leading conte...
This article examines the nature of the duologue between artist and creative source, as a lost inter...
THE ARTIST INTERVIEW AS A PLATFORM FOR NEGOTIATING AN ARTWORK’S POSSIBLE FUTURES The artist intervi...
Published in the name of Art & Language, the article considers the expansion of artistic and curator...
Published under the name of Art & Language, the article takes issue with prevailing accounts of the ...
Controversies concerning artistic representation have been part of the artistic arena and the public...
The concern about how art and artists converse with production systems is not recent. It dates back ...
The questions this thesis sought to answer are: How do artists perceive themselves as visual communi...