Description
One man’s obsession with Artforum magazine takes us on a hilarious journey to the ultimate meaning of the very creation of art
Reviews
"I can think of no other writer as concerned with formal and thematic questions of pace (not of time, but of the various speeds at which we feel time pacing): not only are the individual books quick-moving, but he’s published over a hundred of them, with no signs of slowing down." — Steven Zultanski, Frieze
"César Aira is an experimental Argentinian author whose short fiction is often funny and always mind-boggling. His new novella, Artforum, is an excellent entrypoint into his wild body of work." — GQ
" A marvelous little collection about compulsion, obsession, and the extraordinary joy that a simple pleasure can bring. " — Kirkus Review
"Aira is unencumbered. He does what he does, and what we receive is giddy, unquestionably self-indulgent, and yet absolutely perfect...For a novella like Artforum, one doesn't need to reach deep into the toolkit of literary theory. Aira creates his own epistemology. It's marvelous to witness." — Kamil Ahsan, NPR
"As Aira illuminates the dead ends in his drive to collect the magazine, he offers rich insight into the appreciation of art and the desire to possess. This entertaining jaunt through the writer’s creative development satisfies with brevity and grace. " — Publishers Weekly
"Artforum, the newest work by César Aira to be published in the U.S., is one of the most fascinating experiences in modern literature. A novel that synthesizes surrealism, pseudo-memoir, philosophy, and theater into the compact space of eighty-two pages, it somehow still retains the fluttery and playful tone that makes this book so enjoyable to read." — Rain Taxi
"His novels are more meaningful when taken together, each a shard of the same symbolic object. Artforum is a minor work that creates a minor cosmos, and in so doing feels — like the rest of Aira, and the best of art — major." — Tyler Malone, The Los Angeles Times
"Aira’s cubist eye sees from every angle." — Patti Smith, The New York Times Book Review
"[W]hile the volume may be slim, it is a surprisingly rich work. For those who have not read him, it is also an excellent place to start a relationship." — Reinaldo Laddaga, 4Columns