- Oct 01 2008 5:17PM
- Sep 08 2008 2:31PM
- Sep 02 2008 4:11PM
- Aug 20 2008 5:46PM
- Aug 19 2008 7:02PM
- Aug 06 2008 11:46AM
- Jul 10 2008 4:37PM
- Jun 24 2008 10:49AM
- Jun 23 2008 2:45PM
- Jun 12 2008 12:37PM
- May 12 2008 7:32PM
- May 12 2008 7:15PM
- May 07 2008 4:05PM
- Apr 29 2008 4:49PM
- Apr 18 2008 6:01PM
- Apr 17 2008 5:58PM
- Apr 09 2008 3:24AM
- Mar 20 2008 2:18PM
- Mar 18 2008 12:06PM
Afterall Issue 17 is available now
The Spring 2008 issue begins with Marta Kuzma’s exploration of sexual liberation movements in the 1960s in
Gerard Byrne’s reworkings of 1960s utopian visions and Lutz Bacher and Hans-Peter Feldmann’s ironic and humanist appropriations of extant imagery from that time offer distinct takes on what our relationship to that period and its political project is or perhaps should be. Along similar lines, Annie Fletcher’s discussion of recent curatorial approaches to feminist art practice, Stephan Pascher’s look at Michael Asher’s Münster caravan project and David Bussel’s reconsideration of Öyvind Fahlström’s 1966 Mao-Hope March show different possible ways of relating artworks to both their specific histories, often political, and today’s circumstances.
Elsewhere in the issue, the effects of history are considered by Walead Beshty in relation to the advent of the readymade. Beshty characterises this history as that of a trap from which several artists, including Paul McCarthy and Jason Rhoades, have attempted to escape. Apparently similar at first glance, Bjarne Melgaard’s work, thanks to its distinct sensibility and intensity, appears in this issue as both a complement and a point of contrast.
Afterall journal is co-published by Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design, London and the School of Art at the California Institute of the Arts, Los Angeles, in association with MuHKA, Antwerp.
Afterall can be purchased in bookshops across the
For more information on Afterall or to subscribe, visit http://www.afterall.org


