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K. eren Tsi ter

    Keren Cytter - d.i.e. now
    The seven most exciting hours of Mr. Trier's life in twenty-four chapters
    A-Z life coaching
    • Tiré du site Internet de Sternberg Press: "An incomplete guide for life. Each person written about is represented by a letter, and when an object turns into a subject it is marked in bold. The form of life coaching described in this book won't lead the reader to social recognition or financial success. If one of the two occurs after reading this text, it is a coincidence. This book aims to expose the owners of an innocent heart to reality's true structures and to utilize them for spiritual growth so their soul and body evaporate into the abstract. This book was written from the middle. The contents of these pages have been modified numerous times. Notes were taken, ideas were rewritten - the ones that survived bare the most essential guidelines and wisdom for life. Copublished with Künstlerhaus, Halle für Kunst & Medien, Graz. Design by Vasilis Marmatakis."

      A-Z life coaching
    • The Seven Most Exciting Hours ... is an adventure novel based on a true story told in a televised interview by the notorious Danishfilmmaker Lars von Trier. Set around a Copenhagen hospital, it describes seven hours in the life of Tibor Klaus Trier the filmmaker'sfather from the moment that his wife goes into labor early in the morning until Lars is born. The plot only then begins to thicken: carjackings, family murder, zombies, Armageddon, and phantom diagnosisof cancer all vie for attention. Using classic slasher flicks and psychological pot-boilers and a wink to Glenn Gould as its guides,Cytter explores the metaphysical wildness of mind representative of von Trier's work.

      The seven most exciting hours of Mr. Trier's life in twenty-four chapters
    • Published on the occasion of the performance of Show Real Drama, this monographic publication concentrates on a performance Keren Cytter developed for If I Can't Dance, I Don't Want to be Part of Your Revolution's edition on Masquerade (2008-10). The publication focuses both on the development of this performance and on the working process within D.I.E. Now, the dance company that was established as a result of Cytter's collaboration with the performers. Catherine Wood contributes with an essay that situates the performance in the context of the history of international dance; Cytter presents a selection of gestures from the choreography of the performances; and performers Andrew Kerton and Dafna Maimon contribute short essays that offer insight into the different stages of the performance on tour. The True Story of John Webber and His Endless Struggle with the Table of Content was presented in an international tour that traveled to Tate Modern (2009, London), Performa (2009, New York), Hebbel am Ufer (2010, Berlin), Van Abbemuseum (2010, Eindhoven), and Tramway (2010, Glasgow). Copublished with If I Can't Dance, I Don't Want to be Part of Your Revolution Contributors Catherine Wood, Keren Cytter, Andrew Kerton, Dafna Maimon

      Keren Cytter - d.i.e. now