In essays that span three decades, one of contemporary art's most
esteemed critics celebrates artists who have persevered in the service
of a medium.
The job of an art critic is to take perpetual inventory, constantly
revising her ideas about the direction of contemporary art and the
significance of the work she writes about. In these essays, which span
three decades of assessment and reassessment, Rosalind Krauss considers
what she has come to call the "post-medium condition"--the abandonment
by contemporary art of the modernist emphasis on the medium as the
source of artistic significance. Jean-François Lyotard argued that the
postmodern condition is characterized by the end of a "master
narrative," and Krauss sees in the post-medium condition of
contemporary art a similar farewell to coherence. The master narrative
of contemporary art ended when conceptual art and other contemporary
practices jettisoned the specific medium in order to juxtapose image and
written text in the same work. For Krauss, this spells the end of
serious art, and she devotes much of Perpetual Inventory to
"wrest[ling] new media to the mat of specificity."
Krauss also writes about artists who are reinventing the medium, artists
who persevere in the service of a nontraditional medium ("strange new
apparatuses" often adopted from commercial culture), among them Ed
Ruscha, Christian Marclay, William Kentridge, and James Coleman.