ABSTRACT

The artist, at least according to Honoré de Balzac, is at work when he seems to be at rest; his labor is not labor but repose. This observation provides a model for modern artists and their relationship to both their place of work-the studio-and what they do there. Examining the complex relationship between process, product, artistic identity, and the artist's studio-in all its various manifestations-the contributors to this volume consider the dichotomy between conceptual and material aspects of art production. The various essays also explore the studio as a form of inspiration, meaning, function, and medium, from the nineteenth century up to the present.

part |106 pages

Introduction

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chapter |16 pages

Introduction

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Old and New Studio Topoi in the Nineteenth Century
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chapter Chapter 2|19 pages

Jean–Léon Gérôme, His Badger and His Studio

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chapter Chapter 3|11 pages

Showing Making in Courbet's

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The Painter's Studio
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part |125 pages

Introduction

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chapter |15 pages

Introduction

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Forms and Functions of the Studio from the Twentieth Century to Today
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chapter Chapter 7|21 pages

The Studio as Mediator

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chapter Chapter 10|21 pages

The Empty Studio: Bruce Nauman's Studio Films

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