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Showing 1 - 6 of
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Until Form Becomes
Larry Neal; Introduction by Allie Biswas
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R247
Discovery Miles 2 470
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A comprehensive and inspiring collection of essays by Larry Neal, a
founder of the seminal Black Arts Movement. "The Black Arts
Movement is radically opposed to any concept of the artist that
alienates him from his community. Black Art is the aesthetic and
spiritual sister of the Black Power concept. As such, it envisions
an art that speaks directly to the needs and aspirations of Black
America." — Larry Neal Growing up in Philadelphia, Neal was
surrounded by Bebop music and writing. He culled inspiration and
teachings from Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes, and the leaders of
the Harlem Renaissance. After studying folklore at the University
of Pennsylvania, Neal became a prolific poet and critic, and he
served as the arts editor for the Liberator where he published many
of his essays about art. Neal encouraged artists to produce work
that was not only politically engaged but also unapologetically
rooted in the Black experience, and this message reverberated
through African American literature, theater, music, and visual
arts. He probed the notion of the Western art historical canon and
challenged Black artists and writers to reshape artistic
traditions. Deeply invested in cultural and personal understandings
of the artist's intentions and experiences, Neal argues that to
properly create and critique a work of art one must invest in the
history of the artist's culture. With an introduction by the writer
and researcher Allie Biswas, this publication celebrates and
memorializes the great writings of a powerful and influential
activist and artist.
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Portia Zvavahera (Hardcover)
Portia Zvavahera, Meredith A. Brown; Interview by Allie Biswas
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R1,650
R1,258
Discovery Miles 12 580
Save R392 (24%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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“The rising star’s ethereal work is filled with transcendent
imagery that allows the viewer to peek beyond the veil of earthly
existence.” — Naomi Rea, Artnet News In her paintings,
Zvavahera gives form to emotions that manifest from other realms
and dimensions beyond the domains of everyday life and thought. Her
vivid imagery is rooted in the cornerstones of our earthly
existence—life and death, pain and pleasure, isolation and
connection, and love and loss. This is the first book to explore
her work in vivid detail. Zvavahera draws from a powerful visual
vocabulary comprising women, her family, and shape-shifting
animals, in scenes both metaphorical and fantastical. In several
paintings, she makes use of intricate patterns taken from her own
floral or classical Zimbabwean designs. Her particular process of
alternating painting and printing results in images that
communicate complex emotions in a play of tension and release. The
result is a deeply personal body of work that probes the nature of
the human condition. As Zvavahera states, “It is me in the
paintings.… I can only speak about myself.” In addition to
gorgeous reproductions of seventy-five paintings, including
up-close details and installation views, this catalogue also
features a new essay by curator Meredith Brown and an interview
with the artist by writer Allie Biswas. This catalogue surveys work
made since 2017, including her much-lauded contribution to the 2022
Venice Biennale.
Few materials have experienced a similar revaluation in
contemporary art as clay has in the past few years. This timely
publication accompanies a large-scale exhibition at the Hayward
Gallery, London, exploring how contemporary artists are using clay
and ceramics in inventive and surprising ways, and pushing the
boundaries of the medium. Featuring the work of over 20
international artists-from Grayson Perry to Woody De Othello-an
introductory essay by curator Cliff Lauson, a text on the history
of fine art and ceramics by writer and critic Amy Sherlock, and a
round table discussion with artists from the exhibition, this
catalogue is a meaningful contribution to the ongoing conversation
about the relationship between art and craft.
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Hiroshi Sugimoto: Time Machine
James Attlee, Geoffrey Batchen, Allie Biswas, David Chipperfield, Edmund De Waal, …
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R1,445
R1,153
Discovery Miles 11 530
Save R292 (20%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Magical images that defy time from the grand master of conceptual
photography. Through his expansive exploration of the possibilities
of still images, the internationally renowned artist and
photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto has created some of the most
alluringly enigmatic photographs of our time; pictures that are
meticulously crafted and deeply thought-provoking, familiar yet
tantalisingly ambiguous. Hiroshi Sugimoto: Time Machine is a
comprehensive survey of work produced over the past five decades,
featuring selections from all of Sugimoto’s major photographic
series, as well as lesser-known works that illuminate his
innovative, conceptually-driven approach to making pictures. Texts
by a collection of international writers, artists and scholars -
including Geoffrey Batchen, Edmund de Waal, Mami Kataoka, Ralph
Rugoff, Lara Strongman and Margaret Wertheim - will highlight his
work’s philosophical yet playful inquiry into the nature of
representation and art, our understanding of time and memory, and
the paradoxical character of photography as a medium suited to both
documenting and invention.
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