Raphael Fonseca & Anna Schneider, eds.
Sweat
Sweat is a sign of both attraction and struggle, joy and excess; it relays fear and illness; it is evidence of exertion and expenditure. As a residue of physical vitality, sweat modulates temperature while enlivening the senses and smoothing the friction among conjugating bodies. Published alongside the eponymous exhibition Sweat at the Haus der Kunst, this book gathers together over thirty artists and writers—including new commissions and pathbreaking works from the seventies and eighties—to connect historical perspectives on and contemporary struggles for radical social emancipation. Traversed by an ethics of and through pleasure, these sensual acts help to materialize narratives that have been silenced or rendered invisible, insisting instead on a politics and poetics of bodies becoming shameless.
Ritualized, civil choreographies such as carnival parades, which assert communities in different places around the world by means of dance and masquerade, have fundamentally inspired the design of this publication: rhythm and movement dynamize the relationship between image and text, and the color concept echoes the code of arms of Mangueira, one of the oldest samba schools in Rio de Janeiro. The multifaceted essay contributions further expand the socio-political convictions addressed in the artistic works.
Sweat. Edited by Raphael Fonseca & Anna Schneider/Haus der Kunst Munich. With artworks by Pacita Abad, Cecilia Bengolea, Mohamed Bourouissa, chameckilerner, Mary Beth Edelson, Philipp Gufler, Sunil Gupta, Eisa Jocson, Isaac Julien, Christine Sun Kim, Daniel Lind-Ramos, Natalia LL, MAHKU (Movement of Huni Kuin Artists), Mulambö, António Ole, Santiago Reyes, Tabita Rezaire, Michele Rizzo, MPA, Guadalupe Rosales, Jacolby Satterwhite, Tschabalala Self, Tuesday Smillie, João Pedro Vale & Nuno Alexandre Ferreira, Kaylene Whiskey, Zadie Xa & Benito Mayor Vallejo; texts by Olamiju Fajemisin, Raphael Fonseca, Renée Akitelek Mboya, André Lepecki, Andrea Lissoni, Miguel Lopez, Anna Schneider, Elena Setzer, Claire Tancons, and Helena Vieira; translation by Stephan Geene and Anna-Sophie Springer; design by Estúdio Margem, São Paolo.
- German and English
- 288 pages
- 17 × 24 cm
- Two paper types, CMYK and Pantone ink, full color and duotone images, richly illustrated
- Softcover, Otabind spine, silkprinting
- ISBN: 978-3-947858-28-6
- Institutional partner: Haus der Kunst, Munich
Published on 01 September 2021