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David Batchelor: Found Monochromes

David Batchelor: Found Monochromes
Library Shelf Location 18.BATC
Publication Date 2010
Description Since 1997, David Batchelor has been photographing single square and rectangle planes of uninterrupted white that he passes as he walks through London and places he visits. The images are informal and impromptu; shot from a uniform distance the white planes are seen on a diversity of backdrops: brick walls, car doors, metal fences and more. Batchelor started this body of work when thinking about the history of the monochrome in painting. Looking at this once radical tradition that began with paintings by Malevich and Rodchenko than taken up by Yves Klein, Piero Manzoni, Ad Reinhardt, Ellsworth Kelly and others, he thought about how a monochromes appears to involve no skill to make. Thinking about this subject, he 'went out into the street, literally, with the aim of finding evidence that the city is actually full of monochromes, that modernity is a precondition of the monochrome and that, in all its artificiality, the city is the monochrome's natural habitat'. He has now collected nearly 500 monochromes and examples from this series have been shown in small groups of prints and in slide installations. Found Monochromes Vol. 1 will bring together the largest group of photographs from this series alongside a conversation between the philosopher Jonathan Rée and Batchelor.
ISBN 9781905464326
Quantity 1
Pages 302
Author Jonathan Ree
Format Hardback
Publisher Ridinghouse, London
Related Artist David Batchelor
Category Photography
Related City/Region London
Language English

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