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Sanja Ivekovi: Sweet Violence

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Sanja Ivekovi: Sweet Violence

Contributors:

By (Author) Roxana Marcoci

ISBN:

9780870708114

Publisher:

Museum of Modern Art

Imprint:

Museum of Modern Art

Publication Date:

1st January 2012

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Individual artists, art monographs

Dewey:

700.92

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

192

Dimensions:

Width 240mm, Height 305mm

Weight:

1340g

Description

Published in conjunction with the first solo museum exhibition of the work of Sanja Ivekovi in the United States, this volume presents the most comprehensive survey on the artist available in English. A feminist, activist, video and performance pioneer, Ivekovi (born Zagreb, 1949) came of age in the early 1970s during the period known as the Croatian Spring, when artists broke free from mainstream institutional settings, laying the ground for a new form of practice antipodal to official art. She produced works of crosscultural resonance that range from Conceptual photomontages to video, installation and performance. This catalogue presents an overview of the artist's projects from the early 1970s to 2010 in all mediums, offering a fascinating view of the official politics of power, gender roles, and the paradoxes inherent in a society's collective memory. Essays by Roxana Marcoci and Terry Eagleton offer a critical examination of the neo-avantgarde in former Yugoslavia, within which Ivekovi's work first emerged, and place her work in the context of violence in art and real-life circumstances. This publication contributes to the reevaluation of significant women artists ad a broader understanding of the discursive relationship between art, performance, political studies, and social change in the post-1960s period.

Reviews

When a retrospective as significent as Croatian artist Sanja Ivekovic's "Sweet Violence" doesn't travel at all, a comprehensive catalogue becomes all the more important. Fortunately, this eponymous summary of the show-which New York's MoMa featured this past winter-delivers the crucial political and cultural background behind Ivekovic's work.--Lauren O'Neill-Butler "Bookforum"

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