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Goetz Von Berlichingen
Goetz Von BerlichingenSammlung Goetz: Herzog & de Meuron
Sammlung Goetz: Herzog & de MeuronA Crime of Self-Defense: Bernhard Goetz and the Law on Trial
Legal expert George Fletcher uses the celebrated trial of New York's Subway Vigilante , Bernhard Goetz, as a springboard to probe the profound relationship between this defensive action, the public's understanding of it, and the court's interpretation of it according to the law.
American Art: From the Goetz Collection, Munich
Artwork by Carroll Dunham, Robert Gober, Jenny Holzer, Mike Kelley, Jonathan Lasker, Louise Lawler, Raymond Pettibon, Paul Pfeiffer, Richard Prince, Jessica Stockholder, Andrea Zittel, Peter Halley, Cady Noland. Edited by Rainald Schumacher. Contributions by Ingvild Goetz. Text by Ursula Frohne, Noemi Smolik.
The Mystery of Painting: Goetz Collection
At various points in this past century, painting has been pronounced dead, painters have been plagued by self-doubt, the act of painting has been equated with the flogging of a dead horse, and the art of painting has been reduced to the separate ingredients of color, ground, and brushstroke. Yet each of the painters included in The Mystery of Painting treats their art form as an emancipated, proud medium that neither calls for a conceptual apology nor for external justification. Linked not by a uniform style but by a common attitude, their pictures are not images of the world but about the world. From Matthew Ritchie's scientific mythologies to Karen Kilimnik's piercingly pretty portraits, from Chris Ofili's cross-cultural collages to Laura Owens's expansive doodles of flora and fauna, The Mystery of Painting may not be such a mystery after all.







