libreria specializzata in arte e architettura
english

email/login

password

ricordami su questo computer

invia


Hai dimenticato la tua password?
inserisci il tuo email/login qui sotto e riceverai la password all'indirizzo indicato.

invia

chiudi

FB googleplus
ricerca avanzata

Migrating Objects. Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas in the Peggy Guggenheim Collection

Marsilio

A cura di Vail K. P. B. e Greene V.
Venezia, 2020; ril., pp. 156, ill. b/n, 100 ill. col., cm 12x24.
(Cataloghi).

Altre edizioni disponibili: Edizione italiana 88-297-0484

ISBN: 88-297-0485-7 - EAN13: 9788829704859

Soggetto: Collezioni,Pittura,Saggi (Arte o Architettura),Scultura

Periodo: 1960- Contemporaneo

Luoghi: Extra Europa

Extra: Arte Africana & Oceanica,Arte Orientale & Indiana

Testo in: testo in  inglese  

Peso: 0.65 kg


The result of extensive recent research, Migrating Objects reveals Peggy Guggenheim's two-decade period of collecting beyond the European and North American art with which she is usually associated

In the 1950s and '60s, Peggy Guggenheim (1898-1979) began to turn her attentions as a collector toward the arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. Migrating Objects focuses on this lesser-known but crucial episode in her life and activities. In these years, Guggenheim acquired works created by artists from cultures worldwide, including early 20th-century sculpture from Mali, the Ivory Coast and New Guinea, and ancient examples from Mexico and Peru.

Migrating Objects emerges from an extended period of research and discussion on this largely ignored area of Guggenheim's collection by a curatorial advisory committee, which has yielded exciting results, including the reattribution of individual works, among them the Nigerian headdress (Ago Egungun) produced by the workshop of Oniyide Adugbologe-illustrated here alongside other pieces that will greatly expand understanding of Guggenheim's collecting.

COMPRA ANCHE



OFFERTE E PROMOZIONI
€ 36.10
€ 38.00 -5%

spedito in 2/3 sett.


design e realizzazione: Vincent Wolterbeek / analisi e programmazione: Rocco Barisci