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Contraption: Rediscovering California Jewish Arists

Hardback

Main Details

Title Contraption: Rediscovering California Jewish Arists
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Renny Pritikin
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:96
Dimensions(mm): Height 280,Width 214
Category/GenreArt and design styles - from c 1960 to now
ISBN/Barcode 9783777429762
ClassificationsDewey:704.03924073
Audience
General
Illustrations Illustrated in colour and black and white throughout

Publishing Details

Publisher Hirmer Verlag
Imprint Hirmer Verlag
Publication Date 8 March 2018
Publication Country Germany

Description

The first book to examine the achievements of California artists of Jewish descent, Contraption illustrates how sixteen artists use the metaphor of the machine to understand and depict how the individual aligns his or her identity with the workings of an at times incomprehensible social system. The compelling works showcased in this catalogue illuminate the humor and drama of a century on the West coast. Cartoonist Rube Goldberg became a beloved humorist at the turn of the last century by drawing enormously complicated machines to accomplish wholly unnecessary jobs. Ned Kahn, who invents machines that make visible otherwise invisible natural phenomena, is among America's greatest artists working today in public places. Amid these towering figures are a hundred years worth of California Jewish artists including standouts such as acclaimed ceramicist Annabeth Rosen and gizmo matriarch Bella Feldman. These artists' works-and fourteen others-gracefully render the world as a gigantic unexplained mechanism, complex, baffling, and lovely.

Author Biography

Mark Dean Johnson is professor of art at San Francisco State University, and the principal editor of Asian American Art: A History, 1850-1970. Renny Pritikin is the chief curator at the Contemporary Jewish Museum and the author, most recently, of A Quiet in Front of the Best Western.

Reviews

"At this exhibit, the audiences won't find the sleek machines populating the dreams and demo videos of the Silicon Valley startups. They'll find clunky, awkward, ridiculous but profoundly affecting mechanisms that will remind us above all of the most outdated technological golems: ourselves." -- "Tablet"