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Ian Burn - by Ann Stephen (Paperback)
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Highlights
- Ian Burn has been described as many things: an activist, a trade-unionist, a journalist, an art critic, a curator, and an art historian--or, as he once described himself in a moment of self-deprecating alienation, "an ex-conceptual artist.
- About the Author: Ann Stephen is Senior Curator, University Art Collection, at the University of Sydney's Chau Chak Wang Museum.
- 776 Pages
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Book Synopsis
Ian Burn has been described as many things: an activist, a trade-unionist, a journalist, an art critic, a curator, and an art historian--or, as he once described himself in a moment of self-deprecating alienation, "an ex-conceptual artist."
Born in Geelong in 1939, Burn studied painting in Melbourne and went on to live and work in London and New York. Burn moved back to Australia in 1977 and passed away in 1993 at the age of fifty-three.
Burn sought to grapple with how art history intersects and engages with contemporary art and political debate, arguing for a decentered view of the world. His legacy is international and can be seen in retrospective exhibitions as recent as 2022, and his work remains a key touchstone in art history.
Edited by Burn's friend, frequent collaborator, and eminent art historian Ann Stephen, this volume brings together forty-nine pieces of Burn's own agile and expansive writings alongside a vast collection of his artworks. The collection concludes with reflections on Burn's life and work from prominent figures and past collaborators in the form of memorial lectures.
About the Author
Ann Stephen is Senior Curator, University Art Collection, at the University of Sydney's Chau Chak Wang Museum. She was appointed a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2009 and served as president of the Art Association of Australia and New Zealand from 2011 to 2014. Since 2014 she has been chair of Art Monthly Australasia. Contributors: Art & Language, Adrian Piper, Paul Wood, Allan Sekula, and Mel Ramsden