About this item

Follow the 163 days of documenta 14 in this stunning daily record created by the event's artists. documenta 14 promises to be one of the most exciting iterations in the exhibition's 62 year history. Presented in the form of an artist's daybook, this journal offers readers a panoramic view of the event through wide-ranging perspectives. Each "daily" spread is created by one of the exhibition's artists. It features artwork created by the artist specifically for the book and specially commissioned texts by an impressive array of critics, curators, historians, poets, and novelists. Exquisitely designed and produced to echo the event's diverse excellence, the documenta 14: Daybook offers an insider's view of one of the art world's most inventive and powerful exhibitions.



About the Author

Quinn Latimer

Quinn Latimer is an American poet and critic based in Basel, Switzerland. She is the author of Rumored Animals (2012) , which won the 2010 American Poetry Journal Book Prize, and Sarah Lucas: Describe This Distance (2013) , which explores the work of Lucas, as well as shame, palindromes, passivity, fertility statuary, Mexico, Napoleon, Artaud, Beckett, Sontag, and Mary Wollstonecraft. Her writing appears in Artforum, Bookforum, Boston Review, frieze, The Paris Review, and elsewhere. Her essays and poems also frequently feature in museum catalogues and critical anthologies. Most recently, she is the editor of Paul Sietsema: Interviews on Films and Works (2012) , and co-editor of No Core: Pamela Rosenkranz (2012) and Olinka, or Where Movement Is Created (2013) . In 2012 she was nominated for a Pushcart Prize and was awarded an Arts Writing Grant from the Creative Capitol/Warhol Foundation, which is funding her writing on current feminist art practices in Europe. Originally from Southern California, and educated at Sarah Lawrence College and Columbia University's School of the Arts in New York, Latimer now teaches at Geneva's Haute école d'art et de design (HEAD) .



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