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Rodney Graham: British Weathervanes

Rodney Graham: British Weathervanes( )
Artist: Graham, Rodney
Text by: Blazwick, Iwona
Slyce, John
Stobbs, Candy
Erasmus, Desiderius
ISBN:978-0-692-00218-6
Publication Date:Feb 2011
Publisher:Christine Burgin Gallery
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $30.00
Book Description:

A new work by Vancouver conceptualist Rodney Graham (born 1949) is always guaranteed to surprise and amuse in equal measure. Indeed, the idea of amusement, espoused by Duchamp as an aesthetic aspiration, is expanded by Graham in British Weathervanesto include the idea of folly, as espoused by the sixteenth-century humanist scholar Erasmus, author of The Praise of Folly(1511). Graham's Erasmus weathervane, made for the cupola of the Whitechapel Gallery in London, shows the...
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Book Details
Pages:48
Detailed Subjects: Philosophy / History & Surveys / Renaissance
Crafts & Hobbies / Folkcrafts
Art / European
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.61 x 8.97 x 0.4 Inches
Book Weight:0.6 Pounds
Author Biography
(Artist)
Desiderius Erasmus was born, probably in 1469, in Rotterdam, Holland. He studied in Paris, traveled in England, Germany, and Italy, and wrote in Latin. Living at the time of the Renaissance when most intellectual concepts were being examined, Erasmus was a great admirer of the ancient writers and edited many of their works. Erasmus remained a Roman Catholic, but believed that many of the priests and theologians had distorted the simple teachings of Jesus. He published an edition of the New Testament-the first edition in the original Greek-in order to make clear the essential teachings of Christianity.

Erasmus liked above all things clear and honest thinking; he despised intolerance and persecution. He was the greatest of the humanists because his books, more effectively than any others, propagated a humane philosophy of life, teaching that one's chief duties are to be intelligent, open-minded, and charitable. The most famous and the most influential of Erasumus' books were The Praise of Folly (1509) and Colloquies (1518). These works, written in lively, colloquial, and witty Latin, expressed his ideas on the manners and customs of his time.

Erasmus exerted a powerful influence not only through his books, but also through the private letters that he wrote to a great number of humanist scholars in all parts of Western Europe. He carried on extensive correspondences with Thomas More of England. More than 1500 of his letters survive today.

Erasmus died in Basel, Switzerland, on July 12, 1536.

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