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International Art English [electronic resource].
Title & Author:

International Art English [electronic resource].

Publication:

Triple Canopy 2018

Restrictions:

Open access content

Notes:
Standard Copyright
Summary:

In “International Art English,” Alix Rule and David Levine describe the language of contemporary art by analyzing a corpus of press releases sent by e-flux, which is paid to do so by museums, biennials, publishers, and art fairs in order to reach a subscriber base of more than ninety thousand art professionals. The essay appeared in 2012 and soon surpassed the popularity of every other Triple Canopy publication. “International Art English” generated innumerable conversations about the relationship between language, legibility, and power in the art world: columns in the Guardian, polemics in e-flux’s online journal, debates at conferences for art historians, and spirited threads on MetaFilter and Reddit. Suddenly, IAE was inescapable. This ebook includes “International Art English”; sentence trees that illustrate IAE’s lexical, grammatical, and stylistic features; a forum on IAE convened the year after the essay’s publication; a response by the artist Mariam Ghani, who participated in the forum; and a retrospective evaluation of the IAE phenomenon by Triple Canopy’s Alexander Provan, who edited the essay. Rule and Levine trace the particularities of IAE to translations of French and German critical texts published in the 1970s in academic publications like October. The widespread use of the internet has, they argue, accelerated the development of IAE, turning it into a kind of lingua franca. The proliferation of international variations—French IAE, Scandinavian IAE, Chinese IAE—ends up diluting the authority of critics, “traditionally the elite innovators of IAE.” Given these developments, Rule and Levine ask: “Can we imagine an art world without IAE? Without its special language, would art need to submit to the scrutiny of broader audiences and local ones? Would it hold up?”
https://www.librarystack.org/international-art-english/?ref=unknown

Resources:
Item Resolution URL
Subject:

Art criticism
Art--Economic aspects
Artists' writings

Form/genre:

Text

Added entries:

Alix Rule
David Levine
Mariam Ghani
Alexander Provan
Nathalie Anglès
Wenzel Bilger
Lauren Cornell
Mostafa Heddaya
Yael Reinharz
Lumi Tan
Hrag Vartanian
Peter J. Russo
Caleb Waldorf
Bidita Choudhury
Camila Mercado
Franklin Vandiver
Jack Rieger
Shira Feldman

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