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ISBN: PB: 9783037345207

University of Chicago Press, Diaphanes

June 2015

224 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

85 halftones

PB:
£26,50
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Cube and the Face

Around a Sculpture by Alberto Giacometti

Alberto Giacometti's 1934 Cube stands apart for many as atypical of the Swiss artist, the only abstract sculptural work in a wide oeuvre that otherwise had as its objective the exploration of reality.

With "The Cube and the Face", renowned French art historian and philosopher Georges Didi-Huberman has conducted a careful analysis of Cube, consulting the artist's sketches, etchings, texts, and other sculptural works in the years just before and after Cube was created. Cube, he finds, is indeed exceptional – a work without clear stylistic kinship to the works that came before or after it. At the same time, Didi-Huberman shows, Cube marks the transition between the artist's surrealist and realist phases and contains many elements of Giacometti's aesthetic consciousness, including his interest in dimensionality, the relation of the body to geometry, and the portrait – or what Didi-Huberman terms "abstract anthropomorphism". Drawing on Freud, Bataille, Leiris, and others Giacometti counted as influence, Didi-Huberman presents fans and collectors of Giacometti's art with a new approach to transitional work.

About the Author

Georges Didi-Huberman is professor at the ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales in Paris. He is the author of more than thirty books on the history and theory of images, including "Images in Spite of All", published by the University of Chicago Press.

Reviews

"Didi-Huberman exploits the formal presence of 'Cube' to construct a metaphoric and polyphonic interplay of critical facets which allows him to engage with a range of Giacometti's aesthetic investigations" – Timothy Mathews, author of "Alberto Giacometti: The Art of Relation"