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A new retrospective of the work of trailblazing artist Barbara
Chase-Riboud Barbara Chase-Riboud is a bestselling novelist, an
award-winning poet, and a renowned visual artist whose sculpture
and drawings are in museum collections around the world. Among her
best-known sculptural work is the Malcolm X series of flowing cast
bronze forms combined with braided fiber elements. Barbara
Chase-Riboud Monumentale traces this pioneering artist's remarkable
career from the 1950s to the present, providing the most
comprehensive account of her important body of work to date. The
book features both celebrated and never-before-seen artworks that
highlight Chase-Riboud's groundbreaking contributions to
contemporary sculpture. In addition to some forty sculptures, the
book presents nearly twenty works on paper, a selection of
Chase-Riboud's poetry, and excerpts from an interview with the
artist. Exploring the many different aspects of Chase-Riboud's
artistic practice, Barbara Chase-Riboud Monumentale provides
unprecedented insights into her meditations on form, memory, and
monument, while revealing the rich array of inspiration she has
drawn from global art history and literature. Published in
association with the Pulitzer Arts Foundation Exhibition Schedule
Pulitzer Arts Foundation, St. Louis September 16, 2022-February 5,
2023
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Wangechi Mutu (Paperback)
Adrienne Edwards, Courtney J. Martin, Kellie Jones
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R979
Discovery Miles 9 790
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The first monograph on the work of celebrated and influential
Kenyan-American artist Wangechi Mutu Wangechi Mutu's remarkable
body of work touches on such issues as sexuality, ecology,
politics, and the rhythms and chaos that govern the world. Her
paintings, sculptures, and collages, often enriched with
culturally-charged materials including tea, synthetic hair, Kenyan
soil, feathers, and sand, interweave fact with fiction, generating
a unique form of myth-making that sets her apart from classical
history or popular culture. This is the first book to document her
evolution and explore her impact.
The first major publication to explore the work of Sonia Boyce, one
of Britain's most exciting contemporary artists, including her
newest and most ambitious work to date The British artist Sonia
Boyce (b. 1962) is celebrated for depicting intimate social
encounters that explore interpersonal dynamics in drawing,
photography, video, and installation, using images and sounds
captured during the participatory art events she initiates. Boyce's
immersive new exhibition for the British Council commission at La
Biennale di Venezia 2022 is her most ambitious to date-focussing on
collaborative play as a route to artistic innovation and the
importance of taking creative risks-both central tenets of Boyce's
exceptional artistic practice. Sonia Boyce: Feeling Her Way
captures the drama and scope of this multisensory work as it
unfolds throughout the British Pavilion. Boyce came to prominence
as a key figure in the British Black arts movement of the 1980s and
the authors' texts connect this astonishing new work with Boyce's
preceding works and her abiding interests and concerns. Published
in association with the British Council Exhibition Schedule: La
Biennale di Venezia (April 23-November 27, 2022)
The first comprehensive look at the nearly seven-decades-long
career of contemporary Mexican American artist Virginia Jaramillo
Over the course of her career, Virginia Jaramillo (b. 1939) has
forged a pathway to exploring ideas and concepts of space through
abstract paintings and handmade paper works influenced by her
myriad interests including physics, the cosmos, mythology, ancient
cultures, and modernist design philosophies. This beautifully
illustrated volume demonstrates that despite having been
historically excluded from the canon of American abstraction,
Jaramillo has made profound contributions to the field. Virginia
Jaramillo: Principle of Equivalence documents more than 60 works
including early paintings that pushed the depth of the painted
surface to its very limits; her innovations in the centuries-old
practice of handmade papermaking; and recent bodies of work, where
Jaramillo engages in deep investigations into antiquity and
architectural ruin through large-scale paintings. In addition to an
overview of Jaramillo’s life and work, this comprehensive
catalogue includes in-depth essays on the artist’s formative
years in Los Angeles, her forty-year devotion to hand papermaking,
and the recent resurgence of her painting practice. An interview
with Jaramillo rounds out the volume. Distributed for Kemper Museum
of Contemporary Art Exhibition Schedule: Kemper Museum of
Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO (June 1–August 27, 2023)
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Cecily Brown (Paperback)
Francine Prose, Courtney J. Martin, Jason Rosenfeld
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R980
Discovery Miles 9 800
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The first - and highly anticipated - monograph on one of the most
influential painters of our time Cecily Brown is a British-born,
New York-based artist who rose to prominence in the late 1990s.
Originally influenced by Cubism and Abstract Expressionism, Brown
has over the years developed her unique voice, which investigates
the sensual qualities of oil paint and portraiture through a
satirizing and celebratory process inspired both by abstraction and
realism. Gentle and yet forceful, Brown's exuberant brushwork, rich
palette, intense energy, and black humor have redefined some of
painting's historical canons.
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Sutapa Biswas: Lumen (Paperback)
Amy Tobin; Text written by Anna Arabindan Kesson, Sutapa Biswas, Alina Khakoo, Courtney J. Martin, …
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R488
Discovery Miles 4 880
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Lumen, a survey of the four-decade career of British-Indian artist
Sutapa Biswas, accompanies two solo exhibitions of the artist's
work held in 2021-22. Biswas emigrated from India to the UK with
her family in the 1960s. Taking the long histories of colonialism
together with personal memories, Biswas's art meditates on
questions of migration, identity and belonging. Her practice has
consistently interrogated Western tradition and discourse, pushing
past absences, exclusions and limited representations to make
evident the entwined histories of culture and politics. This
publication details Biswas's career from its origins in the Black
Arts Movement in the 1980s to her important photographic
installations of the 1990s and her subsequent major moving-image
works, including her newly commissioned film Lumen. The first
substantial publication on the artist in over 17 years, it features
two new conversations with the artist and two commissioned essays.
It also includes a republication of Griselda Pollock's important
text on Biswas's work, along with a postface reflecting on their
relationship in the decades since the essay's original publication.
Published on the occasion of the exhibition: Sutapa Biswas: Lumen
BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (26 June 2021-22
March 2022) and Kettle's Yard, University of Cambridge (16 October
2021-30 January 2022).
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Richard Hunt (Hardcover)
Richard Hunt; Introduction by Courtney J. Martin; Text written by John Yau, Jordan Carter, Leronn Brooks; Interview by …
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R1,842
R1,625
Discovery Miles 16 250
Save R217 (12%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Tracing the impacts of militarism on the American landscape,
through the lens of art, environmental studies, and politics Devour
the Land considers how contemporary photographers have responded to
the US military's impact on the domestic environment since the
1970s, a dynamic period for environmental activism as well as for
photography. This catalogue presents a lively range of voices at
the intersection of art, environmentalism, militarism, photography,
and politics. Alongside interviews with prominent contemporary
artists working in the landscape photography tradition, the images
speak to photographers' varied motivations, personal experiences,
and artistic approaches. The result is a surprising picture of the
ways violence and warfare surround us. Although most modern combat
has taken place abroad, the US domestic landscape bears the
footprint of armed conflict-much of the environmental damage we
live with today was caused by our own military and the expansive
network of industries supporting its work. Designed to evoke a
field book and to nod toward ephemera produced by earlier artists
and activists, the catalogue features works by dozens of
photographers, including Ansel Adams, Robert Adams, Dorothy Marder,
Alex Webb, Terry Evans, and many more. Distributed for the Harvard
Art Museums Exhibition Schedule: Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA
(September 17, 2021-January 16, 2022)
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Robert Ryman (Hardcover)
Courtney J. Martin, Stephen Hoban; Contributions by Sandra Amann, Jo Applin, Charles Gaines, …
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R1,483
Discovery Miles 14 830
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A comprehensive study highlighting the interplay of context and
meaning in Robert Ryman's work This remarkable volume, featuring
new photography and original essays by a formidable array of
scholars and curators, is the most expansive and thorough
investigation of the work of American painter Robert Ryman in over
two decades. Arguing that the relationships between his paintings
are key to understanding his diverse output, the book offers more
faithful reproductions and subtler details of the paintings than
have previously been available, and attends closely to the artist's
own strategies of display. Ryman's paintings are readily identified
by their predominantly achromatic surfaces, but his exploration of
the values and effects of white was never limited to paint. His
experimentations with canvas, board, paper, aluminum, fiberglass,
and Plexiglas have evolved into a material vocabulary as
revolutionary as his use of white. The texts featured here reflect
on the importance of Ryman's practice to contemporary art: Robert
Storr, curator of Ryman's 1993 retrospective, places the painter in
historical context while Courtney J. Martin, curator of his 2015-16
exhibition at Dia Chelsea, looks at Ryman's three-dimensional
works. Drawings scholar Allegra Pesenti investigates his drawing
practice; music historian John Szwed traces the influence of jazz
in Ryman's early works; and artist Charles Gaines asks what, in a
Ryman, is real. Published in association with Dia Art Foundation
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