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Interior Garden (Bilingual edition)

Hodnotenie knihy

Parametre

  • 80 stránok
  • 3 hodiny čítania

Viac o knihe

Revisiting Hannah Höch's Berlin garden—her wartime lifeline and secret creative refuge. At the onset of World War II, the visionary Dada artist Hannah Höch retreated to a secluded house on the outskirts of Berlin, fleeing persecution for her radical collage work and her unflagging opposition to fascism. In the decades that followed, the surrounding garden became her artistic muse, a vital source of sustenance during wartime, and a hiding place for her priceless collection of Dada artworks. This richly illustrated and deeply researched book reimagines Höch’s garden from an artist’s perspective. It brings together Höch’s botanical collages and garden photographs with deep archival cuts exploring her queer history with Til Brugman; new art by the artists Scott Roben and Johanna Tiedtke, based on visits to Höch’s garden; and an essay by the writer Alhena Katsof. Together, these elements interweave past and present, private and public, personal and political, offering new views into Höch’s lush refuge.

Nákup knihy

Interior Garden (Bilingual edition), Hatje Cantz

Jazyk
Rok vydania
2024
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Titul
Interior Garden (Bilingual edition)
Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavateľ
Hatje Cantz
Rok vydania
2024
Väzba
mäkká
Počet strán
80
ISBN10
3775750908
ISBN13
9783775750905
Série
Hodnotenie
5 z 5
Anotácia
Revisiting Hannah Höch's Berlin garden—her wartime lifeline and secret creative refuge. At the onset of World War II, the visionary Dada artist Hannah Höch retreated to a secluded house on the outskirts of Berlin, fleeing persecution for her radical collage work and her unflagging opposition to fascism. In the decades that followed, the surrounding garden became her artistic muse, a vital source of sustenance during wartime, and a hiding place for her priceless collection of Dada artworks. This richly illustrated and deeply researched book reimagines Höch’s garden from an artist’s perspective. It brings together Höch’s botanical collages and garden photographs with deep archival cuts exploring her queer history with Til Brugman; new art by the artists Scott Roben and Johanna Tiedtke, based on visits to Höch’s garden; and an essay by the writer Alhena Katsof. Together, these elements interweave past and present, private and public, personal and political, offering new views into Höch’s lush refuge.