Fail Better: Reckonings with Artists and Critics

Author:   Hal Foster
Publisher:   MIT Press Ltd
ISBN:  

9780262552356


Pages:   400
Publication Date:   25 February 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Our Price $79.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Fail Better: Reckonings with Artists and Critics


Overview

From the distinguished art critic and historian, vital essays on key artists and critics, revealing how they redefined art and criticism over the last six decades. From the distinguished art critic and historian, vital essays on key artists and critics, revealing how they redefined art and criticism over the last six decades. ""Serious art anticipates the future as much as it reflects the present,"" Hal Foster remarked in a 2015 interview. ""By the same token serious art history is driven by the present as much as it is informed by the past."" In Fail Better, Foster, an art critic and historian whose influential work spans disciplines and decades, brings this peripatetic perspective to contemporary art, art criticism, art history, and his own work over the past 50 years. In these 40 texts, Foster reviews artists from Richard Hamilton and Jasper Johns to Gerhard Richter and Ed Ruscha; considers contemporaries from Louise Lawler and Cindy Sherman to Jeremy Deller and Adam Pendleton; and traces the development of criticism since the early 1960s, with essays on such influential figures as Susan Sontag and Rosalind Krauss and institutions like Artforum magazine and the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. Taking his title from Beckett-""try again, fail again, fail better""-Foster notes that, etymologically, an essay is always an attempt, more or less failed. Critics fail artworks, because there can never be a definitive reading; art fails its historical moment, because it cannot resolve the contradictions that prompt it. But in these failures Foster finds historical consciousness, and with it the promise of future work, future illumination. In his ""reckonings"" he turns his own long history of criticism to account, and succeeds in conveying shifting concepts of art and criticism, the work of key artists and critics, and the relationships between criticism, theory, history, and politics over the last six decades.

Full Product Details

Author:   Hal Foster
Publisher:   MIT Press Ltd
Imprint:   MIT Press
Weight:   0.369kg
ISBN:  

9780262552356


ISBN 10:   0262552353
Pages:   400
Publication Date:   25 February 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Introduction I Some Antecedents 1. A Painter of Pop Life (Richard Hamilton) 2. Watchman and Spy (Jasper Johns) 3. Every Sidewalk is a Ray Gun Beach (Claes Oldenburg) 4. Andy Paperbag (Andy Warhol) 5. Object Lessons (Donald Judd) 6. Blank Magic (Dan Flavin) 7. To Support (Richard Serra) 8. Serial and Fused (Eva Hesse) 9. The Underside of Things (Bruce Nauman) 10. Cultural Studies (Dan Graham) 11. In a Glass Darkly (Gerhard Richter) 12. The Culture of the Raster (Sigmar Polke) 13. Evening in America (Ed Ruscha) 14. Blasted Allegories (John Baldessari) 15. The Writing on the Wall (Lothar Baumgarten) Some Contemporaries 16. Oblique Looking (Louise Lawler) 17. Direct Address (Barbara Kruger) 18. The Sex Appeal of the Inorganic (Sarah Charlesworth) 19. I Could Be Me (Cindy Sherman) 20. A Passenger in My Own Psyche (Matt Mullican) 21. Imaginary Tableaux (James Casebere) 22. Third Nature (Thomas Demand) 23. Perverse Pantomime (John Miller) 24. Inexplicable Things (Robert Gober) 25. Philosophical Objects (Charles Ray) 26. Lost and Found (Cornelia Parker) 27. Civil Wars and Pop Utopias (Jeremy Deller) 28. Happy Days (Rachel Harrison) 29. How Not To (Mungo Thomson) 30. Media Corpsing (Ed Atkins) 31. The Artist as Anthologist (Adam Pendleton) Some Critics 32. A Certain Practice of Life (Guy Debord) 33. Radical Style (Susan Sontag) 34. Hyperbolic Criticism (Artforum) 35. Made for Cutting (Rosalind Krauss) 36. An Inventory of Encounters (Yve-Alain Bois) 37. Antinomic Modernism (T. J. Clark) 38. The Ruins of Spectacle (Jonathan Crary) 39. Interdependent Study (the Whitney Program) 40. The Anti-Aesthetic Then and Now Acknowledgments Notes Index

Reviews

Included in the Brooklyn Rail's Best Art Books of 2025 ""Foster writes from the perspective of critical theory, exploring language in favor of its textual innovations and experiments, treating words as pliant and autonomous as the materials used by artists in the twentieth century, such as paint, photography, film, plexiglass, metal, textile, rubber, found objects, etc...In service of clarity in these seas of complex ideas, Foster’s writing and prose style has remained consistently probing, with provocative inquisitiveness for him and his reader alike. His maximal reaching for near perfection in translation of criticism and history has always been based on how great art is a result of the artist’s real struggle."" —The Brooklyn Rail


Author Information

Hal Foster is the Townsend Martin Class of 1917 Professor of Art & Archaeology at Princeton University. He is the author of What Comes After Farce? and Brutal Aesthetics, among other books. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he coedits October, and writes regularly for The London Review of Books.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

NOV RG 20252

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List