Louise Bourgeois : suspension / essay by Robert Pincus-Witten ; [ed., Ellen Robinson]

Date :

Editeur / Publisher : New York : Cheim & Read , 2014

Type : Livre / Book

Langue / Language : anglais / English

ISBN : 978-88-572-2589-0

ISBN : 88-572-2589-5

ISBN : 978-88-572-2588-3

ISBN : 88-572-2588-7

Bourgeois -- Louise -- 1911-2010

Portraits (sculpture) -- 20e siècle -- 1990-2020

Sculpture abstraite -- 20th century -- 21st century

Ambivalence -- Dans l'art -- 20e siècle -- 1990-2020

Femmes sculpteurs -- France -- 20e siècle -- 1990-2020

Femmes sculpteurs -- New York (États-Unis ; État) -- New York (N. Y.) -- 20e siècle -- 1990-2020

Robinson, Ellen (Editeur scientifique / editor)

Cheim & Read (New York, N.Y.) (Editeur scientifique / editor)

Résumé / Abstract : "The sculptures in this exhibition all hang from the ceiling. Along with a group of drawings from the 1940s, in which pendulous forms are delineated in black ink, the selection of works traces the theme of suspension throughout Bourgeois's long career. Spanning more than forty-five years -- from the organic Lair forms of the early 1960s and the Janus series of 1968, to the cloth figures of the 1990s, the hanging heads of the 2000s, and the torqued spirals of shining aluminum made in the last years of Bourgeois's life -- they demonstrate the myriad ways in which she approached material, form, and scale. They also affirm the various readings of Bourgeois's work, whether forma, physhological, biographical, or experiential. For Bourgeois, the sculptures' suspension is an expression of the psyche; as she stated: "Horizontality is a desire to give up, to sleep. Verticality is an attempt to escape. Hanging and floating are states of ambivalence." In psychology, ambivalence refers to conflicting but coexisting feelings for the same person, place, or event. The many dualities at play within Bourgeois's oeuvre (organic/geometric; ridig/pliable; male/female) provide this condition with fertile ground. -- Cheim & Read website