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Tate Papers ISSN 1753-9854

Tate Papers no.31 Spring 2019

This issue offers new perspectives on the work of Joseph Beuys and his engagement with European history, mythology and geopolitics during the 1970s and 1980s. Subjects covered include the work he made in response to a devastating earthquake in Italy in 1980; the legacies of his counter-educational Free International University; Beuys’s interest in the notion of Eurasia; his collaboration with Danish composer Henning Christiansen; and his involvement in the exhibition Strategy: Get Arts, held in Edinburgh in 1970. Other articles in this issue include a technical study of Frank Bowling’s materials and techniques, and an exploration of Antony Hill’s semiotic approach to concrete painting in the 1950s.

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In this Issue

    ‘More Impact than the Venice Biennale’: Demarco, Beuys and Strategy: Get Arts

    Christian Weikop

    Crossing Borders, Bridging Histories: Christian Weikop in conversation with Richard Demarco

    Beuys’s Legacy in Artist-led University Projects

    Christa-Maria Lerm Hayes

    Joseph Beuys: An Earthquake in People’s Minds

    Petra Richter

    ‘Not Incorrect and Particularly Not Irrelevant’: Joseph Beuys and Henning Christiansen, 1966–71

    Peter van der Meijden

    Joseph Beuys and EURASIA

    Victoria Walters

    The Geometry of Syntactics, Semantics and Pragmatics: Anthony Hill’s Concrete Paintings

    Sam Gathercole

    Frank Bowling: Material Explorations

    Laura Homer

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