Programme
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19 September, 2014 / Sabatini Building, Auditorium
Kerstin Stakemeier. Richard Hamilton: a modern artist of a contemporary art
The distinction between Modern and Contemporary Art has become ever more pronounced with the development of the latter as a fully fledged cultural industry within the last ten years. But the distinction is not one of the terms of production and distribution of cultural commodities alone, it also is one of artistic genres and their fundamental expansion via non artistic media. In his artistic work since the late 1940s Richard Hamilton again and again pushed the boundaries of those artistic genres, but while employing numerous media, from (exhibition) design to television ads, he ultimately never abandoned those artistic genres in favour of a more media based art. Like many fellow "Pop" affiliates, Hamilton remained a distinctively modern artist. Still, from his early days in the Independent Group onwards he produced a decidedly contemporary art. An art that, unlike other Pop-identified artists, realized a fundamental reconstruction of modern artistic genres rising from the post-war culture industry.
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26 September, 2014 / Nouvel Building, Auditorium 200
Eloy Fernández Porta. When does critique laugh? Richard Hamilton and the comedy of genre
Setting forth from the series The Critic Laughs, one of the most incisive works in the exhibition, this intervention approaches Hamilton’s work from the background of the confrontation between “masculine” Pop Art and second-wave feminism that gained force at the end of the 1960s. Within this discursive framework, the domestic imagery and advertising fiction that run through the work of the British artist take on a new dimension and reveal the poetics of humour in which binaries of genre appear as the segmentation of the market of origin and as a never-ending source of comical effects.
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30 September, 2014 / Nouvel Building, Auditorium 200
Diedrich Diederichsen. Pop vs the popular – distinction and inclusion around 1960
Around the 1960s, one can observe what in system theory is called a re-entry on both sides of the divide between popular and high art. The distinction between high and low reenters both fields and produces new co-ordinates, in which in the long run the low of the low get disqualified as well as the high of the high. This was not visible because both re-entries took the form of long cultural struggles, which were fought by the forces of the cultural industry and the critical and subversive actors, often fighting from the same side against imaginary opponents. Now that we can see this process, Diederichsen asks: should we opt for the discredited positions?.