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Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
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Mark Morrisroe (Hardcover)
Stuart Comer, Thomas Seelig, Elisabeth Lebovici; Edited by Thomas Seelig, Beatrix Ruf
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R1,099
R981
Discovery Miles 9 810
Save R118 (11%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A luminous comet shooting across the late 70s constellation of
photographers and artists that included Nan Goldin, David
Armstrong, Jack Pierson and Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Mark Morrisroe
produced an incredibly rich and various body of work in the brief
ten-plus years in which he was active. He survived a fraught
childhood and teen years as a prostitute (he was once shot by a
client) to attend the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston,
where he made friendships with Goldin, Armstrong and others,
performed in drag under the name Sweet Raspberry, cofounded the
punk zine "Dirt "("he sort of invented the Boston punk scene," Jack
Pierson later recalled) and eventually graduated from the school
with honors. Shortly after, Morrisroe moved to New York, acquired a
Polaroid camera and began photographing. Most of his photographs
are portraits--of hustlers, lovers, friends and of himself--or
hand-painted photograms. Morrisroe is also famed for his X-ray
self-portraits, which show the bullet lodged near his spine after
his shooting. All of his output carries this reckless, go-for-broke
character, and an edge of urgency and necessity. After his death
(from AIDS-related illnesses), more than 2,000 Polaroids were found
among his possessions. This first comprehensive monograph compiles
photographs and ephemera from the early punk years to Super-8
films, photograms and the late self-portraits. More than 500
photographs are reproduced here, alongside essays and an extensive
biography.
Born to a drug-addicted mother, Mark Morrisroe (1959-1989) left
home at 13, began hustling at 15 and at 17 was shot in the back by
a client. The entirety of Morrisroe's brief life was characterized
by danger and poverty, and mythologized by him as such: his mother
was a friend and neighbor of Albert DeSalvo (aka the Boston
Strangler) and Morrisroe claimed to be his illegitimate son.
Morrisroe died in 1989.
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Luke Fowler (Hardcover)
Stuart Comer, Will Bradley; Edited by Beatrix Ruf, Julia Peyton-Jones, Hans Ulrich Obrist
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R529
Discovery Miles 5 290
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A prominent figure in Glasgow's vibrant art scene, Luke Fowler's
cinematic collages break down conventional approaches to
biographical and documentary filmmaking. Fowler's films have often
been linked to the British Free Cinema of the 1950s, and Fowler
likewise avoids didactic voice-over and narrative continuity in
favor of impressionistic sound and editing. However, Fowler moves
beyond simply referencing the work of his predecessors. Mercurially
applying the logic, aesthetics and politics of his subjects-who
include the composers/musicians Cornelius Cardew and L. Voag, and
the psychologist R.D. Laing-to the film he is making about them, he
creates atmospheric, sampled histories that reverberate with the
vitality of the people he studies. This is the first major
publication on Luke Fowler. It provides a comprehensive overview of
his artistic production, with color illustrations, an in-depth
discussion between Stuart Comer and the artist, and an essay by
Will Bradley.
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