Ce que le sida m’a fait
Art et activisme à la fin du XXe siècle
Elisabeth Lebovici

19,50

This essay, written in the first person, is built around a series of monographic texts, interviews, and thematic essays, which constitutes an elective cosmology of a period of artistic and activist creativity in both France and the United States. Historian and art critic Elisabeth Lebovici discusses a variety of artists, protest organizations, artworks, and direct actions: ACT UP, “phone trees”, Richard Baquié, Gregg Bordowitz, Alain Buffard, Douglas Crimp, “political burials”, General Idea, Nan Goldin, Félix González-Torres, Gran Fury, L’Hiver de l’amour, Roni Horn, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Zoe Leonard, Mark Morrisroe, William Ollander, “The Patchwork of Names”, The Real Estate Show, Lionel Soukaz, Philippe Thomas, Georges Tony Stoll, Paul Vecchiali, David Wojnarowicz, Dana Wyse, zaps… Illustrated with numerous archives and ephemera that emphasize the importance of graphic works in the fight against AIDS, Ce que le sida m’a fait (What AIDS has done to me) is a necessary work to understand the “AIDS years”.

Author: Elisabeth Lebovici
Winner of Pierre Daix Award 2017
Directed by: Patricia Falguières
Coordination: Pauline de Laboulaye, Clément Dirié, Anne de Margerie
Edition: jrp | ringier and la maison rouge – fondation Antoine de Galbert
Published in 2017
French edition14,5 x 22,5 cm
320 pages, 90 b/w illustrations
ISBN: 978-3-03764-499-7