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Teaching Materials Signposts: Lecture notes - Beuys
Signposts
Critical Studies Stage 1


FIAR 160 & 163

about Signposts

Signposts Presentation 1: Introduction

Signposts Presentation 2: Reading and Notetaking

Signposts Presentation 3: Research Methods

Signposts Presentation 4: Notes on Writing a Critique of an Exhibition

Signposts Presentation 5: Referencing

Reading List

London Trip (travel and links)

London Trip (notes)

Lecture Notes:
Beuys
The Score
Warhol

JOSEPH BEUYS- 'Everyone an Artist'


Joseph Beuys 1921 - 86

In the Arena documentary screened as part of the Signpost lecture series we come face to face with Joseph Beuys,
one of the most controversial artists of the twentieth century.

Like Marcel Duchamp before him, Beuys often took raw, relatively unmediated materials and presented them as sculpture (the change to these materials was often only achieved by juxtaposition - the uniting of disparate elements - and their recontextualisation as 'art objects' usually leading to their presentation in a gallery. Unlike Duchamp (or at least in differing ways), Beuys deliberately drew on myth, including his own mythologised history, to animate his works. Whereas Duchamp primarily addressed the intellect, Beuys would claim to be working towards a language of the soul. Rather than adopt an elitist stance however, Beuys took great pains to find pragmatic ways of realising his ideas and articulating his notion that everyone had the capability of being an artist. It was often these practical steps that led to the greatest controversies - the opening of the teaching institutions to any interested parties - the involvement with nascent Green party politics - the recommending to Northern Ireland that the people there could learn lessons from the way stones in the Giant Causeway lock together.

For a sometimes troubled and introspective personality, Beuys was often surprisingly open to working with collaborators ranging from students, housewives, municipal workers through to fellow artists such as Nam June Paik and other members of the Fluxus group.
Shaman, Charlatan, witty fool or foolish wit Beuys embodies many of the problems, aspirations and contradictions facing the contemporary artist and is therefore a richly provocative figure when used as a measure for one's own artistic ideals and intentions.
References:
Books
(can be found in the college library under 708.9 BEU)

Bastian H. (ed.), (1999), 'Joseph Beuys: Drawings - The secret block for a secret person in Ireland', Royal Academy of Arts, London

Kuoni, Carin, (compiler), (1990), 'Josef Beuys in America' - Energy Plan for the Western Man Writings by and interviews with the artist, Four Walls Eight Windows, New York

Moffit, J. (1988), 'Occultism in Avant Garde Art', UMI Research Press, London

Rose, Bernice and Ann Temkin (eds.), (1993), 'Thinking is Form - The Drawings of Joseph Beuys', Thames and Hudson

Stachelhaus, H., (1987), 'Joseph Beuys', Abbeville Press, New York

Staek, Klaus and Gerhard Steidl, (1987), 'Beuys in America' (PR: a photographic essay), Steidl publishers, Gottingen and Edition Staeck, Heidelberg

Links:
beuys1 Joseph Beuys: Past the Affable an article written by Greg Masters
"...Beauty, however, becomes an archaic concept in Beuys's sphere. Not that what we recognize as beautiful is banished. Rather, that limitation of regarding beauty as an object of veneration or a holding a mirror up to the ideal is extended. Beuys creates a new idea of beauty.
'
This is an interesting site and a good source of further Beuys links and images
beuys2 'A Brief Biography' -Joan Rothfuss, Walker Art Center curator, and also (same page):
'Actions' - Emily Rekow, Walker Art Center, Department of Education and Community Programs
A useful but not too brief article on the Beuys lifestory and a short article on Beuys' use of performance art.
beuys3 MATERIAL AS METAPHOR - a 'hyperessay' by Julie Luckenbach - from Beuys/Logos
'Whether they are found or made, autonomous sculptural objects or relics of a past performance, Beuys' objects exist in a metaphoric field--on a continuum of fluid connections and associations from which metaphors emerge and radiate.'

If Beuys had witnessed the Internet I'm sure he would have applauded some of the radical strategies found in this beautifully presented and well-written essay.
beuys4 7000 Oaks

Continuation in New York of Beuys' 7000 oaks project.
felt suitFelt Suit
fold galleryMultiples
A brief description of the use of Multiples by artists, including Beuys.
Links:
Joseph Beuys Plight 1986 : State of the Art Episode 3
'I Like America'
Joseph Beuys - Multiples - Ivam - Valencia 03 08

Please send further Beuys links/references for inclusion to:
p1ramsay@plymouth.ac.uk
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