Merz World: Processing the Complicated Order von Peter Bisseger | ISBN 9783905701371

Merz World: Processing the Complicated Order

von Peter Bisseger und weiteren, herausgegeben von Adrian Notz und Hans U Obrist
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonAdrian Notz
Herausgegeben vonHans U Obrist
Autor / AutorinPeter Bisseger
Autor / AutorinStefano Boeri
Autor / AutorinDietmar Elger
Autor / AutorinYona Friedman
Autor / AutorinThomas Hirschhorn
Autor / AutorinKarin Orchard
Autor / AutorinGwendolin Webster
Buchcover Merz World: Processing the Complicated Order | Peter Bisseger | EAN 9783905701371 | ISBN 3-905701-37-5 | ISBN 978-3-905701-37-1

Merz World: Processing the Complicated Order

von Peter Bisseger und weiteren, herausgegeben von Adrian Notz und Hans U Obrist
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonAdrian Notz
Herausgegeben vonHans U Obrist
Autor / AutorinPeter Bisseger
Autor / AutorinStefano Boeri
Autor / AutorinDietmar Elger
Autor / AutorinYona Friedman
Autor / AutorinThomas Hirschhorn
Autor / AutorinKarin Orchard
Autor / AutorinGwendolin Webster
The evolving artwork and early, all-encompassing installation „Merzbau“ was German Dadaist Kurt Schwitters' obsession. He began building a fantastical structure inside his Hanover studio in 1923, which he conceived as a project without end. It gradually took over most of the house. He continued to work on it in different locations throughout his life, remarking that the „Merzbau“ contained everything that was important to him. This groundbreaking volume results from the first of a series of Zurich-based symposia on the „Merzbau“ and its legacy in contemporary architecture, art and society. The „Symposium Merzbau“ sets a new standard for further research on Schwitter's influential project. * * Edited by curator and writer Hans Ulrich Obrist, this book includes contributions by art historians, critics and architects—including Yona Friedman, Thomas Hirschorn and Gwendolen Webster—who discuss ways in which the „Merzbau“ resonates in their fields, and provide new perspectives on Schwitters' under-examined masterwork. * * *