TO LOSE YOUR HEAD (IDOLS) – Catalonia in Venice

by Pedro Azara, Francesc Torres, Bestue Guarch David, Perejaume Perejaume, Lua Coderch, Lola Lasurt, and Daniela Ortiz

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for TO LOSE YOUR HEAD (IDOLS) – Catalonia in Venice

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

For their 2019 Venice Biennale pavilion, Catalonia presented an exhibition exploring the life of public statues and reflecting on the capacity of artworks to possess agency. The project considers the often-intense relationship that forms between humans and statues, focusing on fifteen such works from around Catalonia. At times celebrated, vandalized, protected, or destroyed, figurative sculptures have a strange capacity to inspire intense emotions, to make one “lose their head.”

The collective artist book, To Lose Your Head (Idols), includes written and artistic reflections on the exhibition’s theme, exploring the idea of artistic agency as it analyses the passions that are sparked when dealing with figurative sculpture. Pedro Azara, an architect, archaeologist, and professor of aesthetics, explores the perception of images as living entities. Looking at the deep reverence and radical iconoclastic urges inspired by works of public art, he considers how the Western artistic tradition might still be deeply animist. Six contemporary Catalan artists—David Bestué, Lúa Coderch, Lola Lasurt, Daniela Ortiz, Perejaume, and Francesc Torres—take on this question from the perspective of artistic practice, creating works and essays in response to Azara. The publication includes documentation of the exhibition and provides information on accompanying works by playwright Marcel Borràs, architect Tiziano Schürch, and filmmaker Albert García-Alzórriz, in collaboration with poet Gabriel Ventura.
 
  • ISBN10 8494423444
  • ISBN13 9788494423444
  • Publish Date 11 September 2020
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country ES
  • Imprint Editorial Tenov S.L.
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 192
  • Language English