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Positioning Alice Neel as a champion of civil rights, this book
explores how her paintings convey her humanist politics and capture
the humanity, strength, and vulnerability of her subjects Â
“One of the most ambitious and thorough collections of Neel’s
work to date.”—Allison Schaller, Vanity Fair  “For me,
people come first,” Alice Neel (1900–1984) declared in 1950.
“I have tried to assert the dignity and eternal importance of the
human being.” This ambitious publication surveys Neel’s nearly
70-year career through the lens of her radical humanism. Remarkable
portraits of victims of the Great Depression, fellow residents of
Spanish Harlem, leaders of political organizations, queer artists,
visibly pregnant women, and members of New York’s global diaspora
reveal that Neel viewed humanism as both a political and
philosophical ideal. In addition to these paintings of famous and
unknown sitters, the more than 100 works highlighted include
Neel’s emotionally charged cityscapes and still lifes as well as
the artist’s erotic pastels and watercolors. Essays tackle
Neel’s portrayal of LGBTQ subjects; her unique aesthetic
language, which merged abstraction and figuration; and her
commitment to progressive politics, civil rights, feminism, and
racial diversity. The authors also explore Neel’s highly personal
preoccupations with death, illness, and motherhood while
reasserting her place in the broader cultural history of the 20th
century. Published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Distributed by
Yale University Press Exhibition Schedule: The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York (March 22–August 1, 2021)  Guggenheim,
Bilbao (September 17, 2021–January 30, 2022)  de Young
Museum, San Francisco (March 12–July 10, 2022)
This career-spanning publication features conceptual, political,
formal, and technical perspectives on the work of contemporary
sculptor Charles Ray For Charles Ray (born 1953), sculpture is a
way of thinking that informs his work across a wide range of
media-from gelatin silver prints to porcelain, fiberglass, wood,
and steel. Charles Ray: Figure Ground spans the whole of the
artist's fifty-year career, from his early photographs and
performances through his intriguing, often unsettling sculptures,
some of which are published here for the first time. The essays
foreground Ray's engagement with preexisting traditions, as well as
charged issues around race, gender, and sexuality (notably
expressed through his explorations of Mark Twain's 1884 novel
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn) and investigate the modalities of
touch that run through his work. In addition, a reflection by Ray
himself and a conversation between the artist and Hal Foster offer
further insights into his multifaceted practice. Published by The
Metropolitan Museum of Art/Distributed by Yale University Press
Exhibition Schedule: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
(January 31-June 5, 2022)
This generously illustrated volume surveys a new chapter in the
history of environmental art, one in which space, geopolitics,
human relations, urbanism, and utopian dreamwork play as important
a role as, if not more than, raw earth. Discussed are case studies
by seven artists and two artist teams-Jennifer Allora and Guillermo
Calzadilla, Francis Alys, Yael Bartana, Joana Hadjithomas and
Khalil Joreige, Emre Huner, Andrea Geyer, Matthew Day Jackson, Lucy
Raven, and Santiago Sierra. While some of these artists explore
historical and symbolic configurations of space, others parse the
social, legal, and economic conditions of specific land-sites,
including the Navajo Nation, the island of Vieques, the border town
of Juarez, and the cities of Tongling, Jerusalem, and Beirut. Not
confined to the displacement of matter, these artists employ a wide
range of media, such as performance, animation, assemblage, and
photography. Distributed for the Princeton University Art Museum
Exhibition Schedule: Princeton University Art Museum 10/23/10 -
02/20/11
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New Jersey as Non-Site (Hardcover)
Kelly Baum; Contributions by Beatriz Colomina, Kathryn Dammers, Hal Foster, William Gleason, …
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R924
R775
Discovery Miles 7 750
Save R149 (16%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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“Best in Show” — 2014 AAM Museum Publications Design
Competition Between 1950 and 1975, some of the postwar era’s most
innovative artists flocked to a very unexpected place: New Jersey.
Appreciating what others tended to ignore or mock, they gravitated
to the state’s most desolate peripheries: its industrial
wastescapes, crumbling cities, crowded highways, and banal suburbs.
There they produced some of the most important work of their
careers. The breakthroughs in land, conceptual, performance, and
site-specific art that New Jersey helped catalyze are the subject
of New Jersey as Non-Site, whose title evokes the mixed-media
sculptures that Robert Smithson began to create in 1968 while
driving the state’s highways with Nancy Holt. This catalogue
examines more than 100 works by sixteen artists, including Amiri
Baraka, George Brecht, Dan Graham, Allan Kaprow, Gordon
Matta-Clark, and George Segal. Organized around three
themes—ruin, cooperation, and displacement—Kelly Baum’s essay
considers their work in relationship to seismic shifts in the world
of art and equally dramatic changes to New Jersey’s economy,
infrastructure, landscape, demography, and social stability.
Distributed for the Princeton University Art Museum Exhibition
Schedule: Princeton University Art Museum (10/05/13–01/04/14)
A beautiful presentation of fifty masterworks of late 19th- to
mid-20th-century avant-garde European art from one of America's
most distinguished private collections Cezanne and the Modern
showcases fifty masterworks of late 19th- to mid-20th-century
avant-garde European art from the Henry and Rose Pearlman
Collection, one of the most distinguished private collections of
modern art in the United States. Among the iconic images
represented are Paul Cezanne's Mont Sainte-Victoire, Vincent van
Gogh's Tarascon Stagecoach, and Amedeo Modigliani's portrait of
Jean Cocteau, as well as an outstanding suite of sixteen
watercolors by Cezanne. The volume opens with Henry Pearlman's
"Reminiscences of a Collector," a fascinating first-person
narrative, newly annotated to identify key individuals and dates
mentioned in the text. An essay by art historian Rachael Z. DeLue
places Pearlman in the context of mid-20th-century American
collecting, and a detailed chronology illuminates Pearlman's
collecting practices in relation to noteworthy events in the art
world. A series of sixteen brief essays by leading scholars focuses
on each of the represented artists and their works, richly
illustrated with sumptuous color plates, select details, and
numerous comparative images. A comprehensive checklist documenting
each of the works-including detailed provenance, exhibition
history, bibliographic references, and commentary by a
conservator-rounds out this handsome volume, which is published to
accompany the first international tour of this important
collection. Distributed for the Princeton University Art Museum
Exhibition Schedule: Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology,
Oxford (03/13/14-06/22/14) Musee Granet, Aix-en-Provence
(07/11/14-10/05/14) High Museum of Art, Atlanta (10/25/14-01/11/15)
Vancouver Art Gallery (02/07/15-05/18/15) Princeton University Art
Museum (09/12/15-01/03/16)
The essays in More than One examine sequentiality and serialism in
the practice of photography from the medium's earliest years to the
present. Contributors explore nuances of syntax and sense raised by
works like photographic albums, books, thematic portfolios,
journalistic photo features, and documentations of performance art.
Fully illustrated essays discuss, among other topics, the
little-known volume Beyond This Point (1929), a collaborative
experiment by American photographer Francis Bruguiere and London
radio producer Lance Sieveking; the evolving relationship between
public space and sexual self-definition in the early work of Minor
White; and an important performance work by artist Ana Mendieta.
The title essay surveys the social conditions and expressive
motives that have given rise to serial and sequential forms
throughout the history of photography. Distributed for the
Princeton University Art Museum
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