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Chisenhale Gallery launches the second title in its Chisenhale
Books series, Nikita Gale: IN A DREAM YOU CLIMB THE STAIRS. Marking
the finale of Gale's Chisenhale exhibition, Gale's first artist's
book contains an intergenerational conversation with conceptual
artist Barbara Kruger and a short meditation by Pulitzer
Prize-winning writer Hilton Als. These feature alongside
contributions by artist and Chisenhale Gallery alum P. Staff and
Dr. Benedicte Boisseron, author of Afro-Dog: Blackness and the
Animal Question. Through the lens of a multifaceted practice, Gale
examines themes of invisibility and audibility, interrogating the
dynamic between performer and spectator, structure, and decay.
Produced with great care, this extraordinary book is reflective of
the artist's practice. Four visual essays, hand-annotated by Gale
-- Absence, Ruin, Silence, Dog -- explore themes central to the
work. Nikita Gale: IN A DREAM YOU CLIMB THE STAIRS deploys
throw-outs, gatefolds, five different types of papers, and a subtly
disruptive design to delve into Nikita Gale's art.
Presenting new work by American artist Kehinde Wiley, as he
explores the European landscape tradition through film and painting
The American artist Kehinde Wiley (b. 1977) is best known for his
spectacular portraits of African Americans with knowing references
to the grand European tradition of painting. He was commissioned in
2017 to paint Barack Obama, becoming the first Black artist to
paint an official portrait of a president of the United States. His
work makes reference to old master paintings by positioning
contemporary Black sitters in the pose of the original historical
figures, raising issues of power and identity, and the absence or
relegation of Black and minority-ethnic figures within European
art. For his first collaboration with a major UK gallery, Wiley
will depart from portraiture to explore the European landscape
tradition through the medium of film and painting, casting Black
Londoners from the streets of Soho. His new works will explore
European Romanticism and its focus on epic scenes of oceans and
mountains, drawing inspiration from the National Gallery's
masterpieces in landscape and seascape. Published by National
Gallery Company/Distributed by Yale University Press Exhibition
Schedule: The National Gallery, London (December 10, 2021-April 18,
2022)
* Featuring quirky, delightful illustrations by Lesley Barnes and
fun, engaging text by Zoe Whitley. * New title in the popular Tate
Meet the Artist series. Enter into the vivid world of Sophie
Taeuber-Arp and create your own original art along the way! Meet
the Artist: Sophie Taeuber-Arp is packed with make-and-dos and
inspiring activities for budding young artists. Experiment with
puppet making and papier-mache, make your own abstract stained
glass tealight and be design a dada necklace or even become an
abstract poet! The revised and expanded Meet the Artist series of
activity books introduces children to renowned artists in a fun and
engaging way. Every book includes an introduction to the artist's
life followed by a series of activities that explore prominent
themes and ideas in the artist's work. Featuring beautiful
reproductions of key artworks, and illustrated by a leading
contemporary illustrator, every book in the Meet the Artist series
encourages children to use art to explore ideas and express their
own experiences through art-making.
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Cathy Wilkes (Paperback)
Cathy Wilkes, Zoe Whitley
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R356
R322
Discovery Miles 3 220
Save R34 (10%)
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Belfast-born British artist Cathy Wilkes will be representing Great
Britain at the 58th International Art Exhibition at the Venice
Biennale in 2019. Wilkes will present a major new solo exhibition
at the British Pavilion between 11 May and 24 November. Renowned
for her distinctive and highly personal sculptural installations
featuring humanoid figures that highlight the tender intimacy of
everyday life, Wilkes' exhibition will feature new paintings and
sculptures that will provoke a strong emotional response in
viewers, set against the backdrop of the grand architecture of the
British Pavilion. Narratives and histories which often evoke
interiors and places of loss or solitude are suggested through her
evocative objects but never explicitly expressed, and indeed Wilkes
resists written descriptions and explanations of her work,
intentionally not naming her installations, assemblages and
exhibitions in a bid to keep open the viewer's perceptions. This
publication, one of the only books
Print has always been an art form for everyone - relatively cheap
to produce and easy to distribute, and intended to be accessible to
all. It links to painting, and creative autographic expression, as
well as to a tradition of satire and protest, both social and
political. Above all, prints are a means of communication and
cultural exchange and, in the context of Africa and the African
diaspora, these qualities have had a particular resonance. The book
covers the period from 1960, presenting and interpreting a variety
of visual images from the V&A collections in terms of their
political and social context, while also addressing their identity
as art and design. It includes prints by Uzo Egonu, Carrie Mae
Weems and Chris Ofili among others, as well as overtly political
work, such as posters attacking the Apartheid policies of South
Africa and material produced by American Black Power organizations.
Soul of a Nation shines a bright light on the vital contribution of
Black artists to a dramatic period in American art and history. In
the period of radical change that was 1963 to 1983, young Black
artists at the beginning of their careers in the USA confronted key
questions and pressures. How could they make art that would stand
as innovative, original, formally and materially complex, while
also making work that reflected their concerns and experience as
African Americans? This significant new publication surveys this
crucial period in American art history, bringing to light
previously neglected histories of twentieth-century Black artists,
including Frank Bowling, Sam Gilliam, Melvin Edwards, Bettye Saar,
Jack Whitten and William T. Williams. This book presents
era-defining artworks that changed the face of art in America, and
features substantial essays from curators Mark Godfrey and Zoe
Whitley, writing on abstraction and figuration respectively. It
also explores art historical and social contexts with subjects
including black feminism; AfriCOBRA and other artist-run groups;
the role of museums in the debates of the period; and where visual
art sat in relation to the Black Arts Movement.
Elijah Pierce (1892-1984) was born the youngest son of a former
slave on a Mississippi farm. He began carving at an early age when
his father gave him his first pocketknife. Pierce became known for
his wood carvings nationally and then internationally for the first
time in the 1970s. Accompanying a major exhibition at the Barnes
Foundation, Philadelphia, this publication seeks to revisit the art
of Elijah Pierce and see it in its own right, not simply as
'naive'. Elijah Pierce made his living as a barber; he was also a
qualified preacher. Just as his barber shop was a place for gossip
and meeting, so his art reflects his own and his community's
concerns, but also universal themes. Through his carvings Pierce
told his own life story and chronicled the African-American
experience. His subjects ranged from politics to religious stories
but he seldom distinguished the race of his figures - he thought of
them as everyman. His secular carvings show his love of baseball,
boxing, comics and the movies, and also reflect his appreciation
for American heroes who fought for justice and liberty. In 1932,
Pierce completed 'the Book of Wood', which he considered his best
work. Originally carved as individual scenes, the completed 'Book'
tells the story of Jesus carved in bas-relief. He and his wife
Cornelia held "sacred art demonstrations" to explain the meaning of
the Book of Wood. Pierce's work was first appreciated in the art
world thanks to a fellow sculptor, Boris Gruenwald, who saw the
expressive power of his work. As a later critic wrote, "There are
500 woodcarvers working today in the United States who are
technically as proficient as Pierce, but none can equal the power
of Pierce's personal vision". Pierce became known primarily in
circles promoting 'naive' art, winning first prize at the
International Meeting of Naive Art in Zagreb, Yugoslavia, in 1973.
The vast majority of his work is now held in Columbus, Ohio, which
had become his home town. This book revisits Pierce's art seeking
to see it in its own right, and not simply as 'naive'. Another
critic wrote: "He reduces what he wants to say to the simplest
forms and compositions. They are decorative, direct, bold and
amusing. He uses glitter and all kinds of devices to make his
message clear. It gives his work an immediacy that's very
appealing" - an appeal arising from a sophisticated art with its
own particular voice.
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