Sculpture Now
February 2013
By Anna Moszynska
An authoritative, highly readable new survey that reveals the great diversity and energy within sculptural practice today
Here are the most exciting developments in sculpture across the globe since the mid-1990s. Identifying the key trends, Anna Moszynska discusses the artists who are forging new paths and setting the contemporary agenda. She examines major shifts that have taken place in the last two decades, including the move from a concern with the discrete object to the more complicated and dynamic relationships found in installation-based practice, as well as the increased concern with the experiential nature of sculpture and the participatory role of the viewer. The world’s most promising new talent is discussed alongside established contemporary artists including Cai Guo-Qiang, Maurizio Cattelan, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Isa Genzken, Thomas Hirschhorn, Mike Kelley, Christian Marclay, Bruce Nauman, Gabriel Orozco, Doris Salcedo, James Turrell, and Ai Weiwei.
- Aldo Rossi: Opera grafica
- Antony Gormley: Expansion Field
- Antony Gromley
- Architectures In Love
- Art & Ecology Now
- Art at the Turn of the Millennium
- Bernd and Hilla Becher - Typologies
- Conversations on Sculpture (Perspectives in Contemporary Sculpture)
- Defining Contemporary Art: 25 Years in 200 Pivotal Artworks
- Didier Fiuza Faustino: Misarchitectures
- Do Ho Suh - Perfect Home
- Do Ho Suh Drawings
- Esther Stocker: Doubts About the Line
- Landscape Installation Art
- Michael Wolf: Architecture Of Density
- Minoru Nomata - Elements
- Mona Hatoum
- Mona Hatoum: Interior Landscape
- Paul Noble
- Paul Noble
- Paul Noble Welcome to Nobson Catalogue
- Pauline Oltheten: Photos from Japan
- Sculpture Now
- Sculpture on the Move 1946–2016: Imposing and Educational: A Digest of Exponents of Contemporary Sculpture
- Sol LeWitt: Incomplete Open Cubes
- Something Flashed, Something Broke, Something Remained: Consciousness Neue Bieriemiennost
- Titus Schade: Allnacht
- Tomás Saraceno: Cloud-Specific
- Unexpected Art: Serendipitous Installations, Site-Specific Works, and Surprising Interventions