What Is Art?: Conversations with Joseph Beuys
Category: Books,Arts & Photography,History & Criticism
What Is Art?: Conversations with Joseph Beuys Details
About the Author Joseph Beuys (1921–1986), alchemist, social visionary and artist, was born in Germany. In 1961, he became Professor of Monumental Sculpture at the Düsseldorf Academy, but was expelled in 1972. With his first gallery “action” in 1965, Teaching Paintings to a Dead Hare, his international reputation began to grow. In 1979, he was honored with a major retrospective at the Guggenheim Museum, New York City. He died just after receiving the prestigious Lehmbruck Prize and left behind numerous large-scale installations and site works, hundreds of provocative multiples and small objects, thousands of drawings, documented social sculpture forums about energy, new money forms and direct democracy, and above all, a methodology and ideas such as “parallel process” and “social sculpture.” Read more

Reviews
Beuys clarifies what he means when he says that everyone is an artist. Fascinating to hear about the meaning behind his use of such substances as honey, copper and felt to name a few, through the conversation unfolding. Materials also mean will, speech and thought. Art means shaping the society in which we live. We also get an impression of his sense of humour.

