Foreword by Steve Baker, Translated by Sarah De SanctisIn their witty and polemical cultural analysis, art and architecture historian Valentina Sonzogni and philosopher Leonardo Caffo explore a myriad a series of visual, ethical, and cultural issues relating to the idea of animality. In twenty-one playful but passionately argued letters to each other, Sonzogni and Caffo propose a change of attitude toward nonhuman animals among advocates, artists, and citizens, particularly in how other-than-human life is presented and re-presented in the visual tradition. Ranging widely across continental philosophy, art theory, and cultural criticism, and with nearly thirty illustrations, An Art for the Other is a fresh and compelling work of contemporary ideas from two of the freshest critical theoreticians in Europe today.
Valentina Sonzogni Libros
Valentina Sonzogni es una historiadora de la arquitectura y del arte, cuyo trabajo profundiza en el análisis de estilos arquitectónicos y movimientos artísticos. Su investigación, que la llevó a obtener un doctorado en Historia y Teoría de la Arquitectura, explora con frecuencia la intrincada relación entre los edificios y las corrientes culturales más amplias. Sonzogni se dedica al análisis en profundidad y a la evaluación crítica de obras arquitectónicas y sus contextos históricos. Sus contribuciones ofrecen una nueva perspectiva a los debates sobre arquitectura, enriqueciendo nuestra comprensión de su evolución.



Year after year, day after day, minute after minute, billions of non-human animals are slaughtered for several purposes and aims (food, clothing, entertainment, research). An analogous situation whose objects were humans instead of animals would obviously never be accepted. But why do we tolerate and even justify one practice while deploring the other? The answer is far from banal: this book is an attempt at finding it beyond the everyday life, through politics and philosophy.
Friedrich-Kiesler-Zentrum, Wien - Friedrich Kiesler: Endless house
- 110 páginas
- 4 horas de lectura
Friedrich Kiesler had a vision of a new concept of the interior: the idea of a polydimensional living space, an organically shaped continuum blending colours, forms and light with magical-mythical ideas to create an individual microcosm - the "Endless House".