close

A*DESK has been offering since 2002 contents about criticism and contemporary art. A*DESK has become consolidated thanks to all those who have believed in the project, all those who have followed us, debating, participating and collaborating. Many people have collaborated with A*DESK, and continue to do so. Their efforts, knowledge and belief in the project are what make it grow internationally. At A*DESK we have also generated work for over one hundred professionals in culture, from small collaborations with reviews and classes, to more prolonged and intense collaborations.

At A*DESK we believe in the need for free and universal access to culture and knowledge. We want to carry on being independent, remaining open to more ideas and opinions. If you believe in A*DESK, we need your backing to be able to continue. You can now participate in the project by supporting it. You can choose how much you want to contribute to the project.

You can decide how much you want to bring to the project.

Estilos de escritura: París y Londres

Magazine

04 May 2010

Estilos de escritura: París y Londres

¿Existen estilos de escritura de la crítica en relación al lugar?
¿Será verdad que los franceses escriben una crítica cargada de literatura y los ingleses lo hacen en plan directo y desde cierta ironía distanciada?
¿Estará la escritura crítica de la península ibérica vinculada a las formas del barroco o casi a un manierismo que impide su traducción a otras lenguas? ¿Tocará desde la escritura crítica en Latinoamérica hacer referencias a Cuba, la antropofagia o el realismo mágico de vez en cuando?

Para ver si parte de estas preguntas tienen una respuesta afirmativa nació Catalogue Magazine, una revista bilingüe (inglés-francés) con dos centros de atención, París y Londres; con dos aproximaciones supuestamente diferenciadas y con la voluntad de acercar tanto a los que escriben como a los que leen.

Aquí el link

Director of Index Foundation, Stockholm, exhibition curator and art critic. Yes, after Judith Butler it is possible to be several things at once. He thinks that questions are important and that, sometimes, to ask means to point out.

Media Partners:

close
close
"A desk is a dangerous place from which to watch the world" (John Le Carré)