Essays and criticism that span Michael Asher's career, documenting
site-specific installations and institutional interventions.
During a career that spanned more than forty years, from the late 1960s
until his death in 2012, Michael Asher created site-specific
installations and institutional interventions that examined the
conditions of art's production, display, and reception. At the Art
Institute of Chicago, for example, he famously relocated a bronze
replica of an eighteenth-century sculpture of George Washington from the
museum's entrance to an interior gallery, thereby highlighting the
disjunction between the statue's symbolic function as a public monument
and its aesthetic origins as an artwork.
Today, Asher is celebrated as one of the forerunners of institutional
critique. Yet because of Asher's situation-based method of working, and
his resistance to making objects that could circulate in the art market,
few of his works survive in physical form. What does survive is writing
by scholars and critics about his diverse practice. The essays in this
volume document projects that range from Asher's environmental works and
museum displacements to his research-based presentations and reflections
on urban space.
Contributors
Michael Asher, Sandy Ballatore, Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, Jennifer King,
Miwon Kwon, Barbara Munger, Stephan Pascher, Birgit Pelzer, Anne
Rorimer, Allan Sekula