The World May be Fantastic: 2002 Biennale of SydneyEwen McDonald Biennale of Sydney Limited, 2002 - 251 páginas Invention and imagination, the fake, the fictive, the fantastic, and the downright offbeat: the latest edition of the Sydney Biennale features drug taking in the Andes, the Queen of Mud, Pope Alice, submarines, and flying machines. From May 15 to July 14, at various venues around Sydney's Central Business District (CBD), 57 artists from 21 countries prove that the world may just be fantastic. See Vito Acconci's architectural dreams, Jim Shaw's Thrift Shop, Glenn Brown's dramatic landscapes, Dexter Dalwood's paintings of famous interiors you've never seen, Susan Hiller's UFO witness stories, Paul Noble's fictive cities, Panamarenko's fantastic flying machines, Gilles Barbier's living room-cum-space machine, Cang Xin's buried self, Yutaka Sone's marble cities, and many more collisions between the fantastic and the real world. |
Términos y frases comunes
Aboriginal Adelaide Angeles Ann-Sofi Sidén Antinova architecture Art Gallery Art Museum Artforum Artspace Auckland aura Australia SELECTED Australian Centre become Belgium Berlin Biennale of Sydney born Brisbane Canada CHECKLIST Chris Burden cinema City cm collection cm private collection Contemporary Art courtesy the artist culture d'Art Darger Darren Siwes Eleanor Antin exhibition catalogue FICTION RECONSTRUCTED film France Germany Gilles Barbier Granö installation Institute of Contemporary International Italy Janet Cardiff Japan Jeffrey Vallance Kim Adams Kunst Kunstverein LAST FUTURIST Lives London Melbourne memory mixed media Modern Art Museum of Art Museum of Contemporary Museum of Modern narrative Nguyen-Hatsushiba painting Panamarenko Paris Penalva Philippe Parreno photographs Pope Alice reality Robert MacPherson Rodney Graham Salon de Fleurus sculpture SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS Simon Patterson South Wales space stories Superfictions things tion Tokyo University Venice Biennale Vexation Island viewer Vito Acconci Zealand