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In a work
that will become indispensable to anyone seriously interested in
modern art, Yve-Alain Bois and Rosalind Krauss convincingly introduce
a new constellation of concepts to our understanding of avant-garde
and modernist art practices. Formless: A User’s Guide
constitutes a decisive and dramatic transformation of the study
of twentieth-century culture. Although it has been over sixty years
since Georges Bataille undertook his philosophical development of
the term informe, only in recent years has the idea of
the “formless” been deployed in theorizing and reconfiguring
the very field of twentieth-century art. This is partly because
that field has most often been crudely set up as a battle between
form and content, whereas “formless” constitutes a third
term that stands outside the opposition of form and content, outside
the binary thinking that is itself formal.
In Formless: A User’s Guide, Bois and Krauss, two
of the most influential and respected art historians of our time,
present a rich and compelling panorama of the formless. They map
out its persistence within a history of modernism that has always
repressed it in the interest of privileging formal mastery, and
they assess its destiny within current artistic production. In the
domain of practice, they analyze it as an operational tool, the
structural cunning of which has repeatedly been suppressed in the
service of a thematics of art. Neither theme nor form, formless
is, as Bataille himself expressed it, a “job.” The job
of Formless: A User’s Guide is to explore the power
of the informe. A stunning new map of twentieth-century
art emerges from this innovative reconceptualization and from the
brilliantly original analyses of the work of Jackson Pollock, Andy
Warhol, Cy Twombly, Lucio Fontana, Cindy Sherman, Claes Oldenburg,
Jean Dubuffet, Robert Smithson, and Gordon Matta-Clark, among others.
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