Mangano describes studies of baby teeth over the past half century, specifically the levels of man-made radiation from atomic bombs and nuclear reactors. He examines how these studies have been used to set nuclear policy.
"The Austrian writer Christoph Ransmayr has contributed an inspired literary investigation of the work and life of this artist living near the French village of Barjac. He takes us through La Ribaute, the artist's studio compound, past glass houses and leaden installations, through poppy fields and dense scrub, through underground passages and containers filled with pictures and sculptures. Meanwhile, the photographer Thomas Flechtner has captured fleeting visual impressions of this creative terrain. Markus Bruderlin, Mark Rosenthal and Katharina Schmidt, each with a deep knowledge of Anselm Kiefer's work, have provided illuminating introductions to the individual chapters that go to make up this detailed compendium which, focusing on four major areas of Anselm Kiefer's work, offers the reader an insight into the specific emblematics used by this artist as well as into the process of his pictorial production and the many-faceted nature of his artistic output."--Jacket
Mit seinem neuesten Künstlerbuch The Shape of Ancient Thought legt Anselm Kiefer erneut ein Photographiebuch vor. Die auf seinen ausgedehnten Reisen u. a. durch Indien und Italien entstandenen und von ihm überarbeiteten photographischen Werke zeigen Tempelarchitekturen aus dem Orient und Okzident. Der Titel bezieht sich auf ein bahnbrechendes Buch des US-amerikanischen Kunsthistorikers und Schriftstellers Thomas McEvilley: The Shape of Ancient Thought (Antike Denkbilder), 2002. McEvilley gelingt es in einer umfassenden komparativen Studie Parallelen und Gemeinsamkeiten zwischen der indischen und der griechisch-römischen Philosophie aufzuzeigen. Kiefer greift McEvilleys Theorie auf, indem er Aufnahmen indischer und griechischer Stätten zusammen zeigt und miteinander verbindet. In The Shape of Ancient Thought findet Kiefer eindrucksvolle Bilder, die die Erkenntnisse McEvilleys visuell erfahrbar machen. Das Buch wird etwa 28 Photoarbeiten des Künstlers umfassen. Anselm Kiefer lebt und arbeitet in Paris. 2008 wurde er mit dem Friedenspreis des deutschen Buchhandels ausgezeichnet. Seine Werke wurden in den bedeutendsten Museen der Welt ausgestellt.
While most major museums in the United States and abroad hold examples of the German artist Anselm Kiefer's work, the nature and extent of his achievement are the subject of intense debate. This volume reproduces in full The Heavenly Palaces - Merkabah, an important large-scale artist's book created by Kiefer in 1990. Featuring highly evocative images beautifully reproduced here in full color, this work is accompanied by three penetrating essays by experts who approach the book from various perspectives, explicating its many layers of meaning to an unprecedented degree. The first essay deals impressionistically with the motifs and iconography of The Heavenly Palaces - Merkabah. The next treats its themes and meaning, concentrating especially on Jewish references and resonances, an especially challenging aspect of this German artist's oeuvre. In the final essay, the importance of the medium of photography is addressed by surveying its use by Kiefer since the beginning of his career.
Anselm Kiefer, einer der bedeutendsten zeitgenössischen Künstler, eröffnet im Februar 2012 das Ausstellungsjahr im Essl Museum mit einer von Sammler Karlheinz Essl persönlich kuratierten Retrospektive. Die Ausstellung umfasst 15 Werke, darunter vier neue Hauptwerke aus Kiefers jüngster Schaffensperiode. Agnes und Karlheinz Essl haben sich über viele Jahre intensiv mit Kiefers Werk auseinandergesetzt und zahlreiche bedeutende Werke erworben, die nun erstmals einer breiten Öffentlichkeit zugänglich gemacht werden. Kiefers Kunst thematisiert das Erinnern, Gedächtnis, Vergänglichkeit und Vergessen. Seine großformatigen, antiheroischen Bilder zeigen eine von der Vergangenheit geprägte, zerstörte Gegenwart. Kiefer setzt gegen die Leere Namen von Orten, Göttern und Personen in ungelenker Schrift, oft inspiriert von Gedichten, etwa von Ingeborg Bachmann oder Paul Celan. Werke wie „Horlogium“ und „Für Paul Celan“ reflektieren zentrale Themen wie den Holocaust und die Schrecken des Zweiten Weltkriegs. Kiefer verwendet in seinen Arbeiten organische Materialien wie Sand, Erde und Asche, um die Vergänglichkeit von Kunst und Leben darzustellen. Zur Ausstellung erscheint ein umfassender Katalog mit zahlreichen Abbildungen.
In the chaos of Milan's swiftly-converting industrial quarter, one massive space has been set aside for contemporary art. Merkaba documents Hangar Bicocca's first installation, the seven title towers, from the prototype stage to installation by cranes and pulleys to the spotlight. Each precarious-looking spire of cement and lead boxes has a name of its own as well. "Falling Stars," "Sternenlager," "Die Sefiroth," "Tzim-Tzum," "Shevirat Ha-Kelim," "Tiqqun" and "The Seven Heavenly Palaces." Their towering silhouettes, some as many as 50 feet high, are as mystical as their titles suggest, but they also seem to make reference to all that is changing and staying the same in the city where they stand, home both to early sacred and secular towers and contemporary skyscrapers. Kiefer, known best for his reckonings with German history, proves that he can work the same alchemy elsewhere.
Für Andrea Emo brings together around twenty paintings and three vitrines alongside recent diaries of Anselm Kiefer (born 1945). Dedicated to nihilist philosopher Andrea Emo, Kiefer's use of molten lead on painted canvases reflects his interest in the concept of destruction and regeneration.
"I think in pictures. Poems help me with this. They are like buoys in the sea. I swim to them, from one to the other. In between, without them, I am lost." Anselm Kiefer, the only visual artist to win the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, is a deeply literary painter. In ten conversations with writer and theologian Klaus Dermutz, Kiefer explores the core elements of his art, aesthetics, and creative processes. He reflects on how the materials he uses—lead, sand, water, fire, ashes, plants, clothing, oil paint, watercolor, and ink—shape his artistic expression. Kiefer also discusses his intellectual influences, including the sixteenth-century Jewish mystic Isaac Luria, German Romantic poet Novalis, Ingeborg Bachmann, Paul Celan, Martin Heidegger, Marcel Proust, Adalbert Stifter, Richard Wagner's operas, the Catholic liturgy, and theater director Tadeusz Kantor. The conversations delve into Kiefer's controversial status, marked by his exploration of German history, themes of guilt, suffering, communal memory, and the allure of destruction, which have garnered both criticism and acclaim. This collection provides a rare glimpse into the mind of a gifted creator, appealing to artists, critics, art historians, cultural journalists, and those interested in the visual arts and twentieth-century literature and history.