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    Das Ende des Kasino-Kapitalismus? Globalisierung und Krise

  • N. Schüller, P. Wollenberg, K.…

    Urban Reports. Urban strategies and visions in mid-sized…

  • Arundhati Roy

    Listening to Grasshoppers. Field Notes on Democracy

  • Anne Verlhac (Hg.)

    Edith Bouvier Beale of Grey Gardens. A Life in Pictures

  • Lars Spuybroek (Hg.)

    The Architecture of Variation (Research & Design)

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    The Making of Design. Vom Modell zum fertigen Produkt

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    Beyond Bloomsbury. Designs of the Omega Workshops 1913-19

  • Della Chuang

    Kyoteau. Bottled Memories

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    Wolfgang Hänsch. Architekt der Dresdner Moderne

  • Ken Hillis

    Online a Lot of the Time. Ritual, Fetish, Sign

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    Hertzianismus. Elektromagnetismus in Architektur, Design…

  • Barkow Leibinger

    An Atlas of Fabrication

  • Jacques Ranciere

    Aesthetics and Its Discontents

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    Bauhaus Streit. 1919-2009. Kontroversen und Kontrahenten.

  • Jon Savage

    The England's Dreaming Tapes

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    Inside the Photograph. Writings on Twentieth-Century…

  • Kelly Coyne, Erik Knutzen

    The Urban Homestead. Your Guide to Self-sufficient Living…

  • Ian Wilson

    The Discussions

  • Jason Sperb, Scott Balcerzak

    Cinephilia in the Age of Digital Reproduction. Film,…

  • Momus

    Solution 11-167. The Book of Scotlands

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    Radical Nature. Art and Architecture for a Changing Planet…

  • Verein 100 Beste Plakate

    100 Beste Plakate 08. Deutschland - Österreich - Schweiz

  • Liam Gillick

    All Books

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    Cosmic Wonder Light Source 3. Light Streams

  • Alastair Fuad-Luke

    Design Activism. Beautiful Strangeness for a Sustainable…

  • Oliviero Toscani, Olivier Saillard

    Workwear. Work Fashion Seduction

  • Shepard Fairey

    Obey. Supply & Demand. The Art of Shepard Fairey.

  • James Hennessey, Victor Papanek

    Nomadic Furniture. D-I-Y Projects that are Lightweight

  • Dominik Landwehr, Verena Kuni (Hg.)

    Home made electronic arts. Do-it-yourself Piratensender,…

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    Grey Gardens (with DVD)

  • Samuel Charters

    A Language of Song. Journeys in the Musical World of the…

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    Inaesthetik Nr.1. Politics of Art

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    Vivre, vaincre

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    The BLDG BLOG Book

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    Depesha. Russian Lifestyle Magazine

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    Guerilla Gardening. Ein botanisches Manifest

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    Bau der Gesellschaft. Architekturvortäge der ETH Zürich

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    Im Detail. Ausstellen und Präsentieren. Museumskonzepte,…

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    20 Japanese Architects. Interviews and Photos

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    Time to Eat the Dog. The Real Guide to Sustainable Living

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    Das Haus und sein Buch

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    The Fundamentals of Landscape Architecture

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    Atlas of Graphic Designers

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    Henri Lefebvre. State, Space, World. Selected Essays

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    YouTube. Online Video and Participatory Culture

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    Prepare for Pictopia. Katalog zur Ausstellung im Haus der…

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    Meaning Liam Gillick

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    A Guide to Democracy in America

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    Der Fremde und die Ordnung der Räume

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    Negative Diskriminierung. Jugendrevolten in den Pariser…

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    Reading Capital

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    Annette Kelm

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    The 3rd Person Archive

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    School Works. Beiträge zu vermittelnder, künstlerischer und…

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    Die Gesellschaft zur Emanzipation des Samples presents:…

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    Funktionale Klänge. Hörbare Daten, klingende Geräte und…

  • Francesca Gavin

    Creative Space. Urban Homes of Artists and Innovators

  • Alison Oddey, Christine White

    Modes of Spectating

  • Alex S. Vitale

    City of Disorder. How the Quality of Life Campaign…

  • Alain De Botton

    The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work

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    Tom Burr

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    Montagen des Realen. Photographie als Reflexionsmedium und…

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    Ästhetik + Politik. Neuaufteilungen des Sinnlichen in der…

  • Terry Wilson

    Tamla Motown. The Stories Behind The UK Singles

  • John Robb

    The North Will Rise Again. Manchester Music City 1976-1996

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    Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. Intersex and After.…

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    Leonhard Euler. Die Geburt der Graphentheorie

  • Katarina Bonnevier

    Behind Straight Curtains. Towards a Queer Feminist Theory…

  • Mark Borthwick

    Not in Fashion

  • Jonas Mekas

    To Petrarca

  • Peter Halley

    Ryan McGuinness Works. Paintings, Sculptures, Sketches,…

  • Catherine David, Georges Khalil, Bernd…

    Di/Visions. Kultur und Politik des Nahen Ostens

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    Curating Architecture and the City

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    Nothing in My Pockets

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    Film Curatorship. Archives, Museums, and the Digital…

  • Emilio Prini

    Fermi in Dogana, Ancienne Douane 4.11.1995 - 14.1.1996

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    Voids. A Retrospective

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    William Eggleston. Democratic Camera. Photographs and Video…

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    Kunstausbildung. Aneignung und Vermittlung künstlerischer…

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    Logo a Lot

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    Neon Addict. The Fluorescent Color Book

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    Anders gesagt. Schriften 1950-2001

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    Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. In Other Words

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    Multiple City. Stadtkonzepte 1908 I 2008

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    Dubai. Stadt aus dem Nichts. Ein Zwischenbericht über die…

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    Resonant Bodies, Voices, Memories

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    Sweet Sweat

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    Naïve. Modernism and Folklore in Contemporary Graphic Design

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    Gordon Matta-Clark. Art, Architecture and the Attack on…

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    Biopolitics and the Emergence of Modern Architecture

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    Donogoo Tonka or the Miracles of Science. A Cinematographic…

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    Architecture Oriented Otherwise

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    Becoming Bucky Fuller

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    Mechanical Sound. Technology, Culture, and Public Problems…

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    We Make Magazines. Inside the Independents

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    Cat Seen (bwab #1)

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    Camps. A Guide to 21st-Century Space

The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things

The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things Curated by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Leckey, "The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things" explores the theme of "techno-animism," whereby the inanimate comes to life through technology. Leckey juxtaposes contemporary art with machines, archeological objects and historical documents.
Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Leckey has curated an exhibition that explores the magical world of new technology, as well as tracing its connections to the beliefs of our distant past.
Historical and contemporary works of art, videos, machines, archaeological artefacts and iconic objects, like the giant inflatable cartoon figure of Felix the Cat – the first image ever transmitted on TV – inhabit an “enchanted landscape” created in Nottingham Contemporary’s galleries, where objects seem to be communicating with each other and with us.
In Leckey’s exhibition “magic is literally in the air.” It reflects on a world where technology can bring inanimate “things” to life. Where websites predict what we want, we can ask our mobile phones for directions and smart fridges suggest recipes, count calories and even switch on the oven. By digitising objects, it can also make them “disappear” from the material world, re-emerging in any place or era.
In this timeless exhibition, “the real and the virtual co-exist”, Leckey has said. Perhaps technology has created its own form of consciousness – an animistic future. While we already live in the realms of what used to be science fiction, we seem to have simultaneously gone back to our ancestral past – a time when ancient civilisations believed spirits inhabited plants, animals, geographic features and even objects.
Leckey’s theatre of “things” is presented in specially designed environments. Works by artists such as William Blake, Louise Bourgeois, Martin Creed, Richard Hamilton, Nicola Hicks, Jim Shaw and Tøyen are displayed alongside a medieval silver hand containing the bones of a saint, an electronic prosthetic hand
that connects with Bluetooth, a bisected 3D model of Snoopy showing his internal organs, and many other treasures that all share connections. Loosely divided into four themes or scenes – the Vegetable World, Animal Kingdom, Mankind and the Technological Domain, Leckey’s exhibition is a collection of not-so-dumb things that all talk, literally or metaphorically, to each other.


Mark Leckey
The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things
Hayward, 2013, 9781853323058