The Unilever Series at Tate Modern |
このアプリは現在ストアで閲覧することができません。 | ||||
価格 | 840円 | ダウンロード |
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ジャンル | 辞書/辞典/その他 | |||
サイズ | 1.8GB (ダウンロードにWIFIが必要) | |||
開発者 | Tate Gallery | |||
順位 |
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リリース日 | 2012-07-24 02:05:16 | 評価 | 評価が取得できませんでした。 | |
互換性 | iOS 5.0以降が必要です。 iPad 対応。 | |||
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"An ambitious app that chronicles a unique collection of art exhibits."
5 stars – Apps Magazine
- Winner at the Fresh Awards 2012, shortlisted for The Lovie Awards
- Promotional Launch Price
A clean and comprehensive app produced to celebrate thirteen years of The Unilever Series at Tate Modern, one of the most innovative and significant contemporary art series of recent years.
Features:
- Over 250 high-definition photographs of artworks, installations and preparatory material.
- 12 videos about the installations and artists plus one specially commissioned video with Nicholas Serota, Director of Tate.
- 24 texts by curators and artists, most of which are now out of print, exploring the works and their inspiration in depth.
- Retina-display imagery throughout.
- Soon to be updated with texts about the current work in the series by Tino Sehgal
For the very first time, Tate has brought together all the artworks so far into one publication in this elegant app, from Olafur Eliasson’s sun to Ai Weiwei’s carpet of sunflower seeds. Explore early sketches and inspiration for many of the artworks, read illuminating essays by curators and interviews and texts by the artists, or simply enjoy the stunning installation photography.
The Unilever Series was launched in 2000 when Tate Modern opened with Louise Bourgeois’s I Do, I Undo, I Redo. The Spanish artist Juan Muñoz was the second artist commissioned in 2001 with Double Bind, and the first British artist was Anish Kapoor with Marsyas in 2002. Olafur Eliasson’s sun illuminated the Turbine Hall with The Weather Project in 2003 and Bruce Nauman’s mesmerising sound installation Raw Materials opened in October 2004. In 2005 Rachel Whiteread created her installation EMBANKMENT, followed by Carsten Höller’s interactive spiralling slides Test Site in 2006. In 2007 Doris Salcedo’s Shibboleth dramatically cracked open the floor of the Turbine Hall, while Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster’s TH.2058 transformed the Turbine Hall into a futuristic shelter in 2008. Miroslaw Balka created the eerie How It Is in 2009, a vast steel chamber with a pitch-black interior, and in 2010 Ai Weiwei created Sunflower Seeds, a landscape of over 100 million hand-made porcelain replicas of seeds. In 2011 Tacita Dean’s FILM, an 11-minute silent 35mm film was projected onto a gigantic white monolith and in 2012 Tino Sehgal’s work will open as the latest piece in this long-running and successful series.
Please note that, due to large amount of rich content in this app, it is very large and will therefore require Wi-Fi to download.
更新履歴
New texts added on Tino Sehgal's 2012 commission for The Unilever Series.
5 stars – Apps Magazine
- Winner at the Fresh Awards 2012, shortlisted for The Lovie Awards
- Promotional Launch Price
A clean and comprehensive app produced to celebrate thirteen years of The Unilever Series at Tate Modern, one of the most innovative and significant contemporary art series of recent years.
Features:
- Over 250 high-definition photographs of artworks, installations and preparatory material.
- 12 videos about the installations and artists plus one specially commissioned video with Nicholas Serota, Director of Tate.
- 24 texts by curators and artists, most of which are now out of print, exploring the works and their inspiration in depth.
- Retina-display imagery throughout.
- Soon to be updated with texts about the current work in the series by Tino Sehgal
For the very first time, Tate has brought together all the artworks so far into one publication in this elegant app, from Olafur Eliasson’s sun to Ai Weiwei’s carpet of sunflower seeds. Explore early sketches and inspiration for many of the artworks, read illuminating essays by curators and interviews and texts by the artists, or simply enjoy the stunning installation photography.
The Unilever Series was launched in 2000 when Tate Modern opened with Louise Bourgeois’s I Do, I Undo, I Redo. The Spanish artist Juan Muñoz was the second artist commissioned in 2001 with Double Bind, and the first British artist was Anish Kapoor with Marsyas in 2002. Olafur Eliasson’s sun illuminated the Turbine Hall with The Weather Project in 2003 and Bruce Nauman’s mesmerising sound installation Raw Materials opened in October 2004. In 2005 Rachel Whiteread created her installation EMBANKMENT, followed by Carsten Höller’s interactive spiralling slides Test Site in 2006. In 2007 Doris Salcedo’s Shibboleth dramatically cracked open the floor of the Turbine Hall, while Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster’s TH.2058 transformed the Turbine Hall into a futuristic shelter in 2008. Miroslaw Balka created the eerie How It Is in 2009, a vast steel chamber with a pitch-black interior, and in 2010 Ai Weiwei created Sunflower Seeds, a landscape of over 100 million hand-made porcelain replicas of seeds. In 2011 Tacita Dean’s FILM, an 11-minute silent 35mm film was projected onto a gigantic white monolith and in 2012 Tino Sehgal’s work will open as the latest piece in this long-running and successful series.
Please note that, due to large amount of rich content in this app, it is very large and will therefore require Wi-Fi to download.
更新履歴
New texts added on Tino Sehgal's 2012 commission for The Unilever Series.
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