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Propose un choix de peintures, dessins et photographies du Moyen Age à aujourd'hui, dont le motif commun est de montrer une femme en train de lire. Offre également une réflexion sur cette activité qui fut longtemps interdite à la femme. [Source : Electre]
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The annotated reader' is a publication-as-exhibition and exhibition-as-publication featuring 281 creative personalities' responses and remarks on a chosen piece of writing. Ryan Gander and Jonathan P. Watts invited a range of people, encompassing contemporary artists, designers, writers, institutional founders, musicians and so on to imagine they've missed the last train. Is there one piece of writing that you would want with you for company in the small hours?? With this in mind, we asked people to submit a text with personal annotations and notes made directly onto it. With over 281 contributions collected over the last few months, we have gathered a selection of contributors including Marina Abramovic, Art & Language, Paul Clinton, Tom Godfrey, Ragnar Kjartansson, Sarah Lucas, Sophie Nys, Alistair Hudson and Hans Ulrich Obrist. The annotation adds a further layer, making each piece unique and a historic record of our current times.
Art, Modern --- Marginalia in art --- Reading in art --- Contemporary art --- Modernism (Art) --- Abäke
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#X-L: Casterman --- Books and reading in art --- Painting, Swiss --- Painting, European --- Painting --- Art museums
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"Two artists--Brandon LaBelle and Annette le Fort--visit their local public library, check out a few books, keep these for a few days then return them. The text and black-and-white photographs included in Touch, and Tender Readings. Books As Archives document this trip to the library. They evoke a sensory experience--tactile, visual, and olfactive--and a meditative performance--walking through the stacks, touching book covers, turning the pages of a book. LaBelle and le Fort present the library as an organic space and the destination of an intellectual and sensuous journey during which thoughts expand quickly beyond the books displayed on the shelves."--
LaBelle, Brandon --- Le Fort, Annette --- Books in art --- Reading in art --- Libraries in art --- Photography, Artistic
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A compendium of more than 70 iconic works of art featuring women who read, from the Virgin Mary to Marilyn Monroe
Women in art --- Reading in art --- Women --- Books and reading --- History
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The reading figure has been a recurrent theme in Western art but especially from the nineteenth century. This book examines Irish portraits during the long nineteenth century in which people are shown reading or holding a book. It explores the different assumptions and values that were ascribed to reading and contemporary constructions of the reader. The selected pictures are by artists born, trained, or practising in Ireland. 'Irish art' is, therefore, used broadly to include work framed in some way by experience of Ireland and its history, culture, and politics. This was a time of large social and cultural shifts for Ireland, including the Great Famine and its aftermath, the growth of Irish nationalism, and the slow erosion of Anglo-Irish landlord power. It was a period of growing mass literacy, and also a time when books and other reading, including Irish novels, were often published in London. Many of the artists and sitters discussed were Anglo-Irish Protestants, a number of whom had Irish nationalist sympathies.
Portraits, Irish --- Reading in art. --- Books and reading in art. --- Women --- History --- Portraits --- Females --- Human beings --- Femininity --- Human females --- Wimmin --- Woman --- Womon --- Womyn --- Irish portraits --- Portraits, Irish. --- 1800-1899 --- Ireland
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