- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Arts
- > history of arts
Full Description
This collection of essays on Francis Bacon (1909-1992) pays tribute to the legacy, influence and power of his art. The volume widens the relevance of Bacon in the twenty-first century and looks at new ways of thinking about or reframing him. The contributors consider the interdisciplinary scope of Bacon's work, which addresses issues in architecture, continental philosophy, critical theory, gender studies and the sociology of the body, among others. Bacon's work is also considered in relation to other artists, philosophers and writers who share similar concerns. The innovation of the volume lies in this move away from both an art historical framework and a focus on the artist's biographical details, in order to concentrate on new perspectives, such as how current scholars in different disciplines consider Bacon, what his relevance is to a contemporary audience, and the wider themes and issues that are raised by his work.
Contents
Contents: Rina Arya: Introduction - Stephen Turk: Francis Bacon, Video Games and the Fragmented Architectural Body - John G. Hatch: Seeing and Seen: Acts of the Voyeur in the Works of Francis Bacon - Peter Jones: Bacon and Bataille - Rina Arya: The Existential Dimensions of Bacon's Art - Nicholas Chare: Wrestling with the Archive: Saving Barry Joule's Bacon - Martin Hammer: Contradiction and Continuity in the Art of Francis Bacon - Darren Ambrose: Deleuze's Bacon: Automatism and the Pictorial Fact.



