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Curator and
historian, gallerist and writer: Klaus Kertess has long been a decisive
and forward-thinking presence in the art world. He founded the Bykert
Gallery in 1966, where he represented artists including Chuck Close,
Ralph Humphrey, Brice Marden and Dorothea Rockburne; three decades
later, he curated the 1995 Whitney Biennial, the follow-up to the
famously political 1993 iteration. "What is being proposed here," he
wrote in a catalogue essay for the 1995 exhibition, "is not a return to
formalism but an art in which meaning is embedded in formal value. An
acknowledgment of sensuousness is indispensable--whether as play or
sheer joy or the kind of subversity that has us reaching for a rose and
grabbing a thorn." The art world has changed considerably from the
relatively convivial world of the 60s to today's globalized milieu, but
Kertess has been a constant throughout the years, curating shows of
provocative new work and writing critical essays on artists whose work
challenges and engages him, while also maintaining a vital literary
sideline (his short stories are collected in 2000's South Brooklyn
Casket Company). This volume collects Kertess' critical works from the
past 30 years, including meditations on Agnes Martin, Joan Mitchell,
John Chamberlain, Vija Celmins, Chris Ofili and Matthew Richie. With
each essay accompanied by full-color reproductions of works discussed,
Seen, Written provides a priceless opportunity to see art through the
eyes of a lifelong viewer.
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