Dirt
new geographies of cleanliness and contamination
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Publication
2012 - I.B. Tauris, London, England
Language
English
Word Count
65,500 words, Guess
Page Count
262 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-101780764170
- ISBN-139781780764177
- Library of Congress Control Number2012277290
- OCLC Control Number798410693
- Better World Books9781780764177
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL30664117M
Classifications
- DDC363.72
- LCCRA567 .D57 2012
- LCCRA567
Description
'Dirt' reveals the fascinating world of filth that remains one of the very last taboos. Our major new exhibition takes a closer look at something that surrounds us but that we are often reluctant to confront. 'Dirt' travels across centuries and continents to explore our ambivalent relationship with dirt. Bringing together around 200 artefacts spanning visual art, documentary photography, cultural ephemera, scientific artefacts, film and literature, the exhibition uncovers a rich history of disgust and delight in the grimy truths and dirty secrets of our past, and points to the uncertain future of filth, which poses a significant risk to our health but is also vital to our existence. Following anthropologist Mary Douglas's observation that dirt is 'matter out of place', the exhibition introduces six very different places as a starting point for exploring attitudes towards dirt and cleanliness: a home in 17th-century Delft in Holland, a street in Victorian London, a hospital in Glasgow in the 1860s, a museum in Dresden in the early 20th century, a community in present day New Delhi and a New York landfill site in 2030. Highlights include paintings by Pieter de Hooch, the earliest sketches of bacteria, John Snow's 'ghost map' of cholera, beautifully crafted delftware, Joseph Lister's scientific paraphernalia and a wide range of contemporary art, from Igor Eskinja's dust carpet, Susan Collis's bejewelled broom and James Croak's dirt window, to video pieces by Bruce Nauman and Mierle Ukeles and a specially commissioned work by Serena Korda.
Subjects
Other Editions
- Dirt: new geographies of cleanliness and contamination
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