Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Jacques Rancière

    Die Lektion Althussers

  • Liss C. Werner

    [En]Coding Architecture - The Book

  • Andrea Kroksnes (Ed.)

    Grip friheten! Take Liberty!

  • Bruno Latour

    Existenzweisen. Eine Anthropologie der Modernen

  • Fabien Bellat

    Amériques / URSS. Architectures du Défi

  • Elke Gaugele (Hg)

    Aesthetic Politics in Fashion

  • Katja Eydel

    Katja Eydel. Schattenfuge / Shadow Gap

  • Armen Avanessian, Robin Mackay (Hg)

    #Akzeleration#2

  • D. Medina Lasansky (Ed.)

    Archi.Pop. Mediating Architecture in Popular Culture

  • Museum Museum Folkwang (Hg.)

    (Mis)Understanding Photography

  • Sudhir Venkatesh

    Floating City. A Rogue Sociologist Lost and Found in New…

  • Perry Grayson

    Playing to the Gallery. Helping contemporary art in its…

  • Ryan Gander

    Culturefield

  • Gunnar B. Kvaran, Kjersti Solbakken (Ed…

    Elmgreen & Dragset. Biography

  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau (Hg.)

    Die Meisterhäuser in Dessau. Bauhaus Taschenbuch 10

  • Andreas Vetter

    Manfred Lehmbruck. Architektur um 1960

  • Danielle Krysa

    Collage. Contemporary Artists hunt and gather, cut and…

  • Markus Metz, Georg Seeßlen

    Geld frisst Kunst - Kunst frisst Geld: Ein Pamphlet

  • Dan Graham, Jessica Russell

    Architecture/Astrology

  • Anette Baldauf (Hg.)

    Victor Gruen. Shopping Town. Memoiren eines Stadtplaners (…

  • Andreas Schulze

    Mirrors And Others. Image Text Louvre

  • Christiane Sörensen, Karoline Liedtke (…

    SPECIFICS. Discussing Landscape Architecture

  • Boris Groys

    On the New

  • Nadir Lahiji (Ed.)

    Architecture Against the Post-Political. Essays in…

  • Brandon LaBelle

    Lexicon of the Mouth. Poetics and Politics of Voice and the…

  • Gilabert, Lawrence, Miljacki, Schafer (…

    OfficeUS Agenda

  • Luca Frei

    Thursday followed Wednesday and Tuesday followed Monday and…

  • Oscar Tuazon

    Oscar Tuazon. Live

  • Morris Louis, Cyprien Gaillard

    From Wings To Fins

  • Maroje Mrduljas, Vladimir Kulic (Ed.)

    Unfinished Modernisations. Between Utopia and Pragmatism

  • Cultures of the Curatorial 2

    Timing: On the Temporal Dimension of Exhibiting

  • Cornelia Lund, Holger Lund

    Design der Zukunft

  • Jai McKenzie

    Light + Photomedia. A New History And Future Of The…

  • Peter Bialobrzeski

    Nail Houses or the Destruction of Lower Shanghai

  • Jasper Morrison

    The Good Life. Perceptions of the Ordinary

  • Jeroen Beekmans, Joop de Boer

    Pop-Up City. City-making in a fluid world

  • Bernd Belina, Matthias Naumann, Anke…

    Handbuch kritische Stadtgeographie

  • Timothy M. Rohan

    The Architecture of Paul Rudolph

  • Mina Marefat

    The Le Corbusier Gymnasium in Baghdad

  • Clog

    Rem

  • David Grubbs

    Records Ruin the Landscape. John Cage, the Sixties, and…

  • AA Bronson, Philip Aarons

    Queer Zines 2 & Queer Zines, boxed set

  • Kate Goodwin (Ed.)

    Sensing Spaces. Architecture Reimagined

  • Kenny Cupers

    The Social Project. Housing Postwar France

  • László Moholy-Nagy

    Sehen in Bewegung: Deutsche Erstausgabe von Vision in…

  • Chantal Pontbriand (Ed.)

    Per/Form. How to Do Things with[out] Words

  • Berit Fischer (Ed.)

    Hlysnan.The Notion and Politics of Listening

  • Drei Farben House

    Choice Item

  • Filip Dujardin

    Fictions

  • Steven Cleeren

    Hugo Puttaert. Think in Colour: Visionandfactory

  • Maurizio Lazzarato

    Signs and Machines. Capitalism and the Production of…

  • Ueli Mäder

    Raum und Macht. Die Stadt zwischen Vision und Wirklichkeit…

  • Gabriel Orozco, Lily Luahana Cole

    Impossible Utopias

  • Kay von Keitz, Sabine Voggenreiter (Hg.)

    Architektur im Kontext. Architecture in Context

  • Michelle Cotton (Ed.)

    Aleksandra Domanovic. From yu to me

  • Justin McGuirk

    Radical Cities. Across Latin America in Search of a New…

  • Armen Avanessian, Robin Mackay (Ed.)

    #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader

  • Lukasz Stanek (Ed.)

    Team 10 East. Revisionist Architecture in Real Existing…

  • Stephen Cairns, Jane M. Jacobs

    Buildings Must Die. A Perverse View of Architecture

  • Jay Swayze

    Le Meilleur des (deux) Mondes. Maisons et Jardins…

  • Olaf Nicolai

    Szondi/Eden

  • Philipp Oswalt (Hg.)

    Dessau 1945. Moderne zerstört: Bauhaus Edition 45

  • Tom Wilkinson

    Bricks & Mortals. Ten Great Buildings and the People…

  • Stefan Römer

    Inter-esse

  • Chantal Mouffe

    Agonistik. Die Welt politisch denken

  • Natalie Czech

    I cannot repeat what I hear

  • Shundana Yusaf

    Broadcasting Buildings. Architecture on the Wireless, 1927-…

  • Pinar Yoldas

    An Ecosystem of Excess

  • Matthew Gandy, BJ Nilsen (Eds.)

    The Acoustic City

  • Jan Svankmajer

    Touching and Imagining. An Introduction to Tactile Art

  • Marc Glöde

    Farbige Lichträume. Manifestationen einer Veränderung des…

  • Olaf Habelmann

    Die Trauben auf deinem Bauch bilden ein Muster

  • Nick Aikens (Ed.)

    Too Much World. The Films of Hito Steyerl

  • Rachel Mader (Hg.)

    Radikal ambivalent. Engagement und Verantwortung in den…

  • Adrian von Buttlar, Kerstin Wittmann-…

    Baukunst der Nachkriegsmoderne. Architekturführer Berlin…

  • Michael Fried

    Warum Photographie als Kunst so bedeutend ist wie nie zuvor

  • Henri Lefèbvre

    Die Revolution der Städte. La Revolution urbaine

  • Martin Pawley

    Theorie und Gestaltung im Zweiten Maschinenzeitalter

  • Marketa Uhlirova (Ed.)

    Birds of Paradise. Costume as Cinematic Spectacle

  • Stasis. Academic Journal

    Social and Political Theory. No. 1

  • Pavlos Lefas

    Architecture. A Historical Perspective

  • Thomas Girst

    The Duchamp Dictionary

  • Christopher Dell

    Das Urbane. Wohnen. Leben. Produzieren

  • Dieter Rams

    Less but better. Weniger, aber besser

  • Matt Zoller Seitz

    The Wes Anderson Collection

  • Louis Martin (Ed.)

    On Architecture. Melvin Charney, a Critical Anthology

  • Adaptive Actions

    Heteropolis

  • Thomas Durisch (Hg.)

    Peter Zumthor. 1985–2013

  • Martin Conrads

    Ohne Mich

  • Gertrud Vogler

    La Défense. Métro, boulot, dodo

  • James Nisbet

    Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the…

  • October Files 16

    John Knight

  • Paolo Belardi

    Why Architects Still Draw

  • Forensic Architecture (Ed.)

    Forensis. The Architecture of Public Truth

  • Clog 10

    Prisons

  • Sylvère Lotringer, David Morris (Ed.)

    Schizo-Culture

  • Gilles Rouffineau (Ed.)

    Passing On History. Design Contribution To Knowledge…

  • Jacques Sbriglio

    Le Corbusier et la question du brutalisme. LC au J1

Dance with Camera

Against the backdrop of the histories of cinema, postmodern dance and performance art, Dance with Camera focuses on the myriad ways visual artists use dance to explore broader themes. Spanning six decades, works by 35 artists and filmmakers propose a rich history of pairing dance and the camera. In video dances made by Merce Cunningham and Charles Atlas choreography is designed for the camera's frame. The camera allows close-ups that bring us in proximity to the dance as in works by artists such as Tacita Dean, Maya Deren and Joachim Koester. Photographic series by Kelly Nipper, Christopher Williams and Elad Lassry freeze time while expanding the notion of dance as a time-based medium. Editing techniques conjure dances impossible in real time in works by Eleanor Antin, Oliver Herring and Bruce Conner.
"The camera, it almost need not be stated, captures things that move. And in the early years of cinema, filmmakers and audiences were enamored of things that moved: trains, horses, rivers, and most of all, dancers. Unlike speeding trains and galloping horses, dancers were the right size for stages and film studios, thereby giving early filmmakers, who were limited by bulky equipment and the need for controlled lighting, the perfect subject. It was immediately evident that dance and film were unusually compatible. In 1894 Thomas Edison filmed dancer Annabelle Moore at his Black Maria studio in New Jersey. Here was the first pas de deux between dancer and camera, a performance whose premier audience was the camera lens. But thousands more saw it through the mediated experience of the moving picture: kinetoscope peep-show films made Annabelle one of the first film celebrities. Her celluloid self was also seen (along with an umbrella dance by the Leigh sisters) on April 23, 1896, in New York City at the first commercially projected film screening in the United States. Audiences cheered. From dance's pivotal role in the nascent medium of film, one can trace a line through Hollywood musicals, experimental film, MTV, YouTube and visual art." -- Excerpted from Jenelle Porter's essay, "Pas de Deux" in Dance with Camera.


Jenelle Porter (Hg.)
Dance with Camera
Institute of Contemporary Art, 2010, 978-0884541189
gerade nicht auf Lager