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Michalis Pichler

Autor/a de Publishing Manifestos

27 obres 81 Membres 2 Ressenyes

Obres de Michalis Pichler

Publishing Manifestos (2019) 29 exemplars
Twentysix Gasoline Stations (2009) 5 exemplars
The Ego and Its Own (2015) 3 exemplars
Der Einzige und sein Eigentum (2009) 3 exemplars
New York Garbage Flag Profile (2005) 2 exemplars
Some More Sonnet(s) (2011) 2 exemplars
New York Post flag profile (2017) 2 exemplars
July August September 2012 (2012) 1 exemplars

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Ressenyes

A cross-reference book of information on aesthetic boundaries, consisting of a bibliography into which inserted text, critical essays, art works, and documents, are arranged chronologically and focused on a selection of so-called greatest hits and conceptual poetics. It contains mentions of such vaguely designated areas as appropriation, postnaive, unboring boring, d tournement, object perdu, and erasure poetry as they occur (with occasional political overtones) in the work of Michalis Pichler. This book is the first monograph focused on the artist and writer's practice. Featuring eleven critical essays, an extensively illustrated catalogue, a conversation with John Stezaker, and selected writings by the artist, the book delivers a solid introduction into conceptual poetics.… (més)
 
Marcat
petervanbeveren | Feb 24, 2023 |
In 1954 Japanese writer and artist Shohachi Kimura published GINZA HACCHO, with photographs by Yoshikazu Suzuki of every building on Ginza Street in Tokyo as an accordion foldout book. Twelve years later, Ed Ruscha published EVERY BUILDING ON THE SUNSET STRIP in almost exactly the same style. While the latter has become a touchstone of conceptual publications and artists’ books, its predecessor remains largely unknown.

Appropriating Shohachi Kimura’s (and Ed Ruscha's) work, Michalis Pichler’s accordion-folded book opens up to a fourteen-foot strip of photographs of EVERY BUILDING ON THE GINZA STREET of today, each building identified by a street number. Crossroads are also identified with captions. Photographed from a car driving past, the individual photos were then pasted together to make the long accordion fold. Paper joins are visible throughout the book.

Pichler’s version offers a modern update, depicting Ginza street in contemporary Tokyo, where the facades are dominated by glamorous high-end global fashion and luxury brands mixed with local heavyweights: SWAROWSKI, Folli Follie, MONTBLANC, YAMAHA, RIMOVA, ZARA, CÉLINE, G SIX, VALENTINO, FENDI, GEOX, PRADA, SONY, NISSAN, MITSUKOSHI, MATSUYA GINZA and LOUIS VUITTON dominating a whole block, BULGARI, TIFFANY, NOVARESE, UGG, KIRA RITO GINZA, Samsonite, Tocca and others on the East-Side. On the West-Side, the parade of by commercial name-dropping includes familiar, festaria, LOUNIE, SHISEIDO, VACHERON CONSTANTINE, DAMIANI, onitsuka tiger, PANDORA, PIAGET, LLADRÓ, Chloé, Abercombie & Fitch, MINX, Yoshinoya, DIANA, UNIQLO, I-PRIMO, SoftBank, GU, TASAKI, MIKIMOTO, MICHAEL KORS, FURLA, CHAUMET, CHANEL, Cartier, AOYAMA, ALFRED DUNHILL, Ermenegildo Zegna, miu miu, POLA, and GINZA TANAKA.

Within Pichler’s body of work EVERY BUILDING ON THE GINZA STRIP / GINZA HACCHO represents a piece of serial photography, urban phenomenology, ambiguous social critique and art history karaoke. In a critical essay on appropriation (2009), Pichler discussed techniques of appropriation employed (often combined) in books today, and related the books of Ed Ruscha to its Japanese predecessors.

Bibliography:
Ruscha, Edward, EVERY BUILDING ON THE SUNSET STRIP, Los Angeles, 1966/1970, ed. 1000/5000
Suzuki, Yoshikazu (Kimura, Shohachi), Ginza Haccho (in Ginza Kawaii), Tokyo, Toho-Shuppan, 1954

In 1954 Japanese writer and artist Shohachi Kimura published GINZA HACCHO, with photographs by Yoshikazu Suzuki of every building on Ginza Street in Tokyo as an accordion foldout book. Twelve years later, Ed Ruscha published EVERY BUILDING ON THE SUNSET STRIP in almost exactly the same style. While the latter has become a touchstone of conceptual publications and artists’ books, its predecessor remains largely unknown.

Appropriating Shohachi Kimura’s (and Ed Ruscha's) work, Michalis Pichler’s accordion-folded book opens up to a fourteen-foot strip of photographs of EVERY BUILDING ON THE GINZA STREET of today, each building identified by a street number. Crossroads are also identified with captions. Photographed from a car driving past, the individual photos were then pasted together to make the long accordion fold. Paper joins are visible throughout the book.
… (més)
 
Marcat
petervanbeveren | Jan 25, 2022 |

Estadístiques

Obres
27
Membres
81
Popularitat
#222,754
Valoració
4.0
Ressenyes
2
ISBN
23
Llengües
3

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