
ISBN 2-84845-006-1
184pp, 11.7x9.9”, hardcover, 2005
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An in-depth look at Bernar Venet's relationship to the affinity for mathematics as the basis for much of his art.
Kuspit writes: Bernar Venet seems to be the most intellectual of conceptual artists, but his intellectuality is a means to a romantic end - what Kant called "the feeling of the sublime." Venet has had a life-long affair with mathematics, but the mathematical murals - his descriptive term - that are its grand climax, are more sublime than mathematical, or rather use mathematics as a springboard to the sublime. They are in fact an inspired rendering of what Kant called "the mathematically sublime."


.hard press edit
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