REMEX - Amy Sara Carroll

REMEX

Toward an Art History of the NAFTA Era
Buch | Hardcover
416 Seiten
2017
University of Texas Press (Verlag)
978-1-4773-1064-9 (ISBN)
89,75 inkl. MwSt
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Featuring dozens of compelling images, this transformative reading of borderland and Mexican cultural production—from body art to theater, photography, and architecture—draws on extensive primary research to trace more than two decades of social and political response in the aftermath of NAFTA.

Honorable Mention, Humanities Book Prize, Mexico Section of the Latin American Studies Association, 2018
Honorable Mention, Arvey Foundation Book Award, Association for Latin American Art, 2019

REMEX presents the first comprehensive examination of artistic responses and contributions to an era defined by the North American Free Trade Agreement (1994–2008). Marshaling over a decade’s worth of archival research, interviews, and participant observation in Mexico City and the Mexico–US borderlands, Amy Sara Carroll considers individual and collective art practices, recasting NAFTA as the most fantastical inter-American allegory of the turn of the millennium. Carroll organizes her interpretations of performance, installation, documentary film, built environment, and body, conceptual, and Internet art around three key coordinates—City, Woman, and Border. She links the rise of 1990s Mexico City art in the global market to the period’s consolidation of Mexico–US border art as a genre. She then interrupts this transnational art history with a sustained analysis of chilanga and Chicana artists’ remapping of the figure of Mexico as Woman.

A tour de force that depicts a feedback loop of art and public policy—what Carroll terms the “allegorical performative”—REMEX adds context to the long-term effects of the post-1968 intersection of D.F. performance and conceptualism, centralizes women artists’ embodied critiques of national and global master narratives, and tracks post-1984 border art’s “undocumentation” of racialized and sexualized reconfigurations of North American labor pools. The book’s featured artwork becomes the lens through which Carroll rereads a range of events and phenomenon from California’s Proposition 187 to Zapatismo, US immigration policy, 9/11 (1973/2001), femicide in Ciudad Juárez, and Mexico’s war on drugs.

AMY SARA CARROLL Ithaca, New York Carroll, a 2017–2018 Society Fellow in Cornell University’s Society for the Humanities, is the author of two poetry collections SECESSION and FANNIE + FREDDIE/The Sentimentality of Post-9/11 Pornography, chosen by Claudia Rankine for Fordham University’s Poets Out Loud Prize. Since 2008, Carroll also has been a member of Electronic Disturbance Theater 2.0/b.a.n.g. lab, coproducing the Transborder Immigrant Tool.

Prelude. The Allegorical Performative
Introduction. Remix || re: Mex || REMEX: Toward an Art History of the NAFTA Era
City

Nafta-Era Performance and Conceptualism’s Prehistory

Mexico City, Readymade: The “PIAS Forms,” Mexico's 1968, and Los Grupos
"Naco" as the Taco: No-Grupo, Maris Bustamante’s La patente del taco, and Melquiades Herrera’s Object Lifeworlds


Post-1994 GDPS and Labor Wars; Institutional Critique and Incorporation

The Almost Ex-Teresa Generation
Vicente Razo’s Anthropological Materialism
Yoshua Okón’s Art and Administration
Minerva Cuevas’s Logocentrism
Francis Alÿs, Santiago Sierra, and the Age of Cuauhtémoc
Teresa Margolles, Remaindered




Woman

¿Desmodernidad? Literalists to the Core!

Polvo de Gallina Negra’s Maternal Prosthesis


Reallegorizing the Female Form

Lorena Wolffer’s “El Derecho de Réplica”
Katia Tirado’s Pub(l)ic Niches
Silvia Gruner’s Fucked-Up Ethnographies
Nao Bustamante’s Inter-American Pageantry




Border

NAFTA-Era Performance and Conceptualism’s Prehistory

Art and Design: The Mexico-US Border after 1965
The Border Art Workshop/Taller de Arte Fronterizo’s Open Door and Laboratory


Post-1994 GDPS and Labor Wars; Institutional Critique and Incorporation

Guillermo Gómez-Peña’s North American Free Art Agreement
inSITE Specificity/Tijuana, Capital of the Twenty-First Century
From Undocumentation to the Undocumentary (Alex Rivera, Sergio Arau and Yareli Arizmendi, Lourdes Portillo, Ursula Biemann, Sergio De La Torre and Vicky Funari, Chantal Akerman, Natalia Almada, _________)




Postlude. REMEX || re: Mex || Remix: Untoward Art Histories of the Third Millennium
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Austin, TX
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Kunstgeschichte / Kunststile
ISBN-10 1-4773-1064-9 / 1477310649
ISBN-13 978-1-4773-1064-9 / 9781477310649
Zustand Neuware
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