Ice Cream

10 Curators, 100 Contemporary Artists, 10 Source Artists


A selection of 100 of the most significant emerging artists today.


Conceived and edited by Phaidon Editors


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Ice Cream

Resumen del libro
  • An exhibition-in-a-book that presents 100 contemporary artists
  • Selected by 10 internationally renowned curators, these artists will be the stars of tomorrow
  • Continuing the phenomenon established by cream (1988) Fresh Cream (2000) and Cream 3 (2003), Ice Cream identifies the most significant emerging figures in an often confusing world and acts as an expert guide to future trends 
  • Each artist is featured over four pages with a selection of their most interesting work together with a commentary by the curator who selected them, an exhibition history, and a bibliography
  • Each curator has also selected a source artist who has inspired or influenced the younger generation, providing readers with a broader historical perspective
  • A must-have for art-world insiders, an essential soucebook for students and all those who follow the contemporary art scene

 




Datos

Sobre el libro

?Following in the footsteps of Cream (1998), Fresh Cream (2000) and Cream 3 (2003), Ice Cream: Contemporary Art in Culture is a global survey of some of the most significant emerging artists working today. With a new selection of 100 artists exclusively chosen by a team of ten internationally renowned curators, this exhibition-in-a-book acts as an expert guide to the trends of tomorrow.

The ten key curators were chosen by Phaidon for their knowledge, acute vision and critical regard. First, each curator nominated ten artists that they felt best represented the ‘cream’ of current contemporary art. They then worked with the artists to select the very best and most representative pieces for inclusion in the book. This volume brings a new twist to the series with the inclusion of The Wrong Gallery as one of our curators. Unlike their nine colleagues, the team from The Wrong Gallery selected only artists who were more than sixty years old and who have recently re-emerged into the contemporary art world’s consciousness. This crossing of generations is not often found in titles focusing on lesser-known artists and brings a distinctive depth and flavour to Ice Cream.

At the same time, Ice Cream offers a panoramic view of an increasingly globalized contemporary landscape. More than ever, the ability to see across geographical borders is vital to understanding the latest developments in art, and the Ice Cream curators have brought their knowledge of grassroots scenes – here spanning more than two dozen countries around the globe – to find today’s most significant emerging artists, no matter where in the world they’ve chosen to make their work.

As with Cream 3, the curators have also selected ten source artists from a preceding generation who have influenced and inspired both them and the artists included here. The addition of these established names provides the reader with the opportunity to reflect upon the works by emerging artists from a different vantage point.

Other innovations found in this edition are the brave responses to the challenge of describing works that are temporary and ephemeral in nature. For example, Tino Sehgal is an artist who chooses not to document his works with photographs, preferring that they be experienced first-hand or described to others by one who has experienced them. In order to include this artist, curator Jens Hoffmann has produced specially commissioned ‘text/images’ that describe the performances.

Of course the experience of personally confronting art is undoubtedly inimitable and there is no substitute for looking at art in its intended context. However, by consolidating information that would be impossible to gather without years of study and criss-crossing the globe, Ice Cream provides a compact and rich resource that can be revisited time and time again.







 

Acerca del autor
Jens Hoffmann is a curator and writer based in San Francisco where he is Director of the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts.
Midori Matsui is an art critic and scholar who has written extensively on Japanese and Western art and culture for a wide variety of periodicals and catalogues.
Philippe Vergne is the Chief Curator and Deputy Director at the Walker Art Center Minneapolis.
Sergio Edelsztein founded The Center for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv in 1995, where he has been the Director since 1997.
Shamim M Momin is an Associate Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art and Branch Director and Curator of the Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria, New York.
Pi Li is a lecturer at the Central Academy of Fine Arts and Curator at The Loft New Media Art Space, Beijing.
Lisette Lagnado was the Chief Curator of the 27th São Paulo Biennial (2006) and, since 2001, she has been editor of the online journal, Trópico.
Gloria Sutton is a former Helena Rubinstein Fellow in Critical Studies at the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program, New York and is currently working with the Kunsthalle, Zurich.
The Wrong Gallery, set up by the artist Maurizio Cattelan, and the curators Massimiliano Gioni and Ali Subotnick, was a tiny, not-for-profit, half-metre-square exhibition space located in a shallow doorway in Chelsea, New York’s gallery district. Evicted in July 2005, the gallery space is currently housed at London's Tate Modern. The Wrong Gallery has organised over 30 exhibitions with artists such as Lawrence Weiner, Elizabeth Peyton and Paul McCarthy. Under The Wrong Gallery's name, Catellan, Subotnick and Gioni have also curated such major international projects as the 4th Berlin Biennial (2006).
Olesya Turkina is a critic, curator and Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Contemporary Art at the State Russian Museum, St Petersburg.

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