000 02063nam a2200193Ia 4500
001 4568
008 241002s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9783939738190
245 0 _aToy Giants: Daniel and Geo Fuchs
_c/ Eugen Blume (Author), Selim Varol (Editor)
260 _aNurnberg;
_bVerlag for Moderne Kunst;
_c2007
300 _a214p;
_c32x25cm
520 _aExhibition catalog. Daniel and Geo Fuchs were, until recently, best known for their stark photographs of animals, fish and humans conserved in science museums, which address the mortality of their subjects. More recently, they've shifted from dark documentary to these glowing Technicolor images of action figures, retaining many of the same concerns and taking up questions about the power of mass media and the cult of personality. Their first crop of new subjects were Batman, Superman and the Incredible Hulk. They soon moved on to Bruce Willis, Sylvester Stallone and Uma Thurman. And when they got to Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden and George Bush, the borders between reality and fiction really started to wobble. Commonalities between the networked world of entertainment and "war games" became unavoidable. The iconographic strategies of a president climbing out of a fighter plane equipped with military gear are scrutinized in a George W. Bush doll in its original packaging, with military accessories. How different the somber, plastic faces of Bruce Willis and Sylvester Stallone, Cold War-era soldiers without much left to do at the box office. These miniature sculptures--the title toys--turn out to be the ideal subjects for the Fuchs' intensely observed portrait photography, which asks but does not answer: outside the toy box, outside the frame, what is real and what is staged? Toygiants leaves the interpretation of its pale, vacant, plastic faces to the viewer.
546 _aEnglish; German
650 _aN4390-5098 Visual Arts. Exhibitions
_95413
700 _aBlume, Eugen
_95414
700 _aFuchs, Daniel and Geo
_95415
700 _aVarol, Selim
_95416
942 _cBK
999 _c4568
_d4568