(Networked) Every Whisper is a Crash on My Ears
    Author: Tom Clark, Farkas Rozsa, Arcadia Missa
    Publisher: Arcadia Missa Publications
    
    Language: English 
    Pages: 318
    Size: 17.6 x 25 cm
    Weight: 
          720 g    
    Binding: Softcover
    ISBN: 9780992674724
    Availability:
 
           In stock     
    
          Price: 
        
    
                                                            
                    €32.00                
                        
        
           
    
            
                            
    
        
                
        
                
   
                                   
 
                                                
    
    
            
            
                Product Description
            
            
This anthology is a record of the exhibitions and commissioned texts from the (networked) Every Whisper is A Crash on my Ears programme that took place at Arcadia Missa. It records the exhibitions themselves and the conversation and production that occurred around the artists' work - such as interviews between Daniel Rourke and Dora Budor and Maja Cule - material which itself is not reducible to just context. Some of these conversations started before this programme and many continued well after - and so this anthology also includes texts by Elvia Wilk, Huw Lemmey and Marina Vishmidt and Neil Gray as well as artworks by Eloïse Bonneviot and Asta Meldal Lynge, which are published as part of the continued conversations around the (networked) programme.
(networked) Every Whisper is A Crash on my Ears consisted of five exhibitions - Dora Budor & Maja Cule - Dear D+M; Amalia Ulman - ETHIRA; Holly White & Megan Rooney - Ocean Living - The Skyscraper in the Sky; Harry Sanderson - Unified Fabric; Bunny Rogers, Jill Magid, Jasper Spicero & Emma Talbot -Random House.
The programme was concerned with the art-work as representation of subjective experience (the political of the personal) within the intersecting conceptual frameworks defining art 'after' the network.