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Richard Flood (1943–2025)

Author of Zero to Infinity: Arte Povera: 1962-1972

18+ Works 157 Members 3 Reviews

Works by Richard Flood

Associated Works

L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Volume 14 (1998) — Contributor — 48 copies, 1 review
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Volume 12 (1996) — Contributor — 42 copies
Mapplethorpe x 7 (2011) — Editor — 19 copies
Shameless: Season 8 — Actor — 14 copies

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5 reviews
Separately renowned in their respective mediums of film and painting, Harmony Korine and Rita Ackermann meet in their mutual affection for unorthodox, mischievous beauty, and more specifically in the creation of psychologically jarring figures amplified through fragmented narratives. Shadowfux documents the artists' first collaboration. Taking Korine's recent film Trash Humpers (2009) as its point of departure, it features large-scale works in which Ackermann and Korine have collaged, show more painted and drawn over stills of the film's beguiling young bodies with old faces. Generated through a call-and-response method, Shadowfux illustrates the importance of cutting to both artists' works. Additionally, it presents short texts by Korine, as well as previously unpublished deleted scenes from Trash Humpers. Accompanying the artists' works are short illustrative texts by exhibition curator Gianni Jetzer, curators Richard Flood and Piper Marshall, and critics Antoine Catala and Cameron Shaw. show less
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held at The Tate Gallery, May 31 - August 19, 2001. Traveled to Walker Art Center, October 13, 2001-January 13, 2002. Zero to Infinity: Arte Povera, 1962-1972 focuses on one of the most innovative and influential art movements of the postwar era. Arte Povera came of age in the context of the ''Italian miracle'' economic boom and the subsequent student and workers revolts of 1968, motivated by an urge to revolt not only against the show more primacy of painting in the postwar period, but also against the emerging consumer culture. This exhibition and its accompanying catalogue provide a highly comprehensive retrospective of the Arte Povera movement as a historical and aesthetic phenomenon that crossed a wide range of disciplines, including sculpture, installation, drawing, photography, film and performance. The exhibition traces Arte Povera's genesis within the artistic and political context of Italy to its positioning within the broader international context of postwar artistic practices, a moment marked by the participation of the Arte Povera group in the 1972 Documenta V exhibition in Kassel. This essential new catalogue is designed by the Walker Art Center's award-winning design department, and includes a wide range of essays by international scholars and curators, as well as rare historical documentation, in an unprecedented re-examination of the Arte Povera movement. show less
the exhibition, Matthew Barney: Cremaster 2, organized by Richard Flood, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, July 18-October 17, 1999

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Works
18
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Rating
3.9
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ISBNs
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