Three Acts

John Divola

BOO 3165 U
€170,00
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CONDITION & NOTES
Very Good / Dust jacket has some shelf wear, and a small price sticker on the rear side. Interior has a hint of edge discolouration.

TYPE PUBLICATION YEAR
Hardcover

2006

EDITION LANGUAGE
First

English

PUBLISHER DIMENSIONS
Aperture Fiundation 24.5 x 29 x 2 cm
CONDITION
Very Good / Dust jacket has some shelf wear, and a small price sticker on the rear side. Interior has a hint of edge discolouration.

TYPE
Hardcover

PUBLICATION YEAR
2006

EDITION
First

LANGUAGE
English

PUBLISHER
Aperture Fiundation

DIMENSIONS
24.5 x 29 x 2 cm

ABOUT

In 1973, California artist John Divola began the first of three highly ambitious and original bodies of work that form Three Acts, the first book dedicated to them.

 

His Vandalism series comprises black-and-white photographs of interiors of abandoned houses. Entering illegally, Divola spray-painted markings that referenced action painting as readily as the graffiti that was then becoming a cultural phenomenon. For the following year’s Los Angeles International Airport Noise Abatement series, he photographed a condemned neighborhood bought out to serve as a noise buffer for new runways, focusing on evidence of previous unsanctioned entries by other vandals. His final work, Zuma, documents the destruction of an abandoned beachfront property by the artist and others, as it deteriorates frame by frame and eventually burns.

 

Divola has much in common with artists such as Bruce Nauman and Robert Smithson who have used photography to investigate other topics. He describes his innovative practice succinctly: “My acts, my painting, my photographing, my considering, are part of, not separate from, this process of evolution and change. My participation was not so much one of intellectual consideration as one of visceral involvement.”