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Art Review Asia [HK] V8 No.3 Fall 2020 (単号)

In this latest issue, ArtReview Asia seeks out artists who have had to come up with every bit of resourcefulness and ingenuity to survive the troubles they find in their different situations, and to carry on making art that in some way speaks to every other trouble of the world right now. Making art that changes society is tricky but making art that refuses to acknowledge what's going on is an easy out. More often than not, acknowledging people's existence is itself an act of solidarity – Deepa Bhasthi looks at the photographs of M. Palani Kumar, who records the abject reality of India's poorest, working and often dying in urban sewers. Patrick J. Reed finds heart in the work of Trinh T. Minh-ha, a filmmaker who, instead of `speaking for' her subjects, finds ways to highlight the relations of power between who's being represented and who's doing the representing. Marv Recinto profiles artist Martha Atienza, whose videoworks attest to the destruction and erasure of the environment and peoples of Bantayan Island in the Philippines. And forms of resistance can also be found in obliquity – Adeline Chia surveys the minimalistic works of Burmese artist Po Po which evade direct meaning and interpretation, pointing both to Burma's Buddhist traditions and to the political struggles of a country that spent five decades under dictatorship.

著者:Artreview Ltd; Semiannual版
ASIN:B08KJR19BK
によって公開:2020/10/11
出版社 Art Review Asia [HK] V8 No.3 Fall 2020 (単号):Artreview Ltd; Semiannual版

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