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Seven Stories Press,U.S. Paperback English

Theory of the Rearguard

How to Survive Contemporary Art (and Almost Everything Else)

By Ivan de la Nuez

Regular price £9.99 £8.49 Save 15%
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15% off

Seven Stories Press,U.S. Paperback English

Theory of the Rearguard

How to Survive Contemporary Art (and Almost Everything Else)

By Ivan de la Nuez

Regular price £9.99 £8.49 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
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  • Theory of the Rearguard examines how contemporary art is in tension with survival, rather than in relation to life. In the twentieth century, Peter Burger's Theory of the Avant-Garde was a cult book focused on the two main tasks that art demanded at the time: to break its representation and to destroy the barrier that separated it from life. Forty years later, The Theory of the Rearguard is an ironic manifesto about contemporary art and its failures, even though Ivan de la Nuez does not waste his time mourning it or disguising it. He argues that our times are not characterized by the distance between art and life, but by a tension between art and survival, which is the continuation of life by any means necessary. In the twenty-first century, Ivan de la Nuez examines art in relationship to politics, iconography, and literature. This austere and sharp book in which Duchamp stumbles upon Lupe, the revolution upon the museum, Paul Virilio upon Joan Fontcuberta or Fukuyama upon Michael Jackson wonders if contemporary art will ever end. Because if it were mortal-'just as mortal as everything it invokes or examines under its magnifying glass'-de la Nuez argues would be worth writing an epitaph for it as he has done in this sparkling book of art criticism.
Theory of the Rearguard examines how contemporary art is in tension with survival, rather than in relation to life. In the twentieth century, Peter Burger's Theory of the Avant-Garde was a cult book focused on the two main tasks that art demanded at the time: to break its representation and to destroy the barrier that separated it from life. Forty years later, The Theory of the Rearguard is an ironic manifesto about contemporary art and its failures, even though Ivan de la Nuez does not waste his time mourning it or disguising it. He argues that our times are not characterized by the distance between art and life, but by a tension between art and survival, which is the continuation of life by any means necessary. In the twenty-first century, Ivan de la Nuez examines art in relationship to politics, iconography, and literature. This austere and sharp book in which Duchamp stumbles upon Lupe, the revolution upon the museum, Paul Virilio upon Joan Fontcuberta or Fukuyama upon Michael Jackson wonders if contemporary art will ever end. Because if it were mortal-'just as mortal as everything it invokes or examines under its magnifying glass'-de la Nuez argues would be worth writing an epitaph for it as he has done in this sparkling book of art criticism.