This expanded edition features the influential work of photographer Roger Ballen, showcasing never-before-seen images from his archive. It highlights his unique artistic vision and offers deeper insights into his photography, making it a significant addition for both fans and newcomers to his work.
A bakers' dozen of the best photographers of the past hundred years, from Helen Levitt and Gordon Parks to Nan Goldin and Ryan McGinley, are brought together here in a series of portfolios expanding on Robert Frank's Americans . Together they consider generations of social upheavals, crises, and shifts in U.S. society, responding to societal problems with attitudes from concerned to ecstatic. Helen Levitt's East Village and Bruce Davidson's are the same, and yet nothing alike, as are Richard Avedon's Texas and Rosalind Solomon's New Orleans, Diane Arbus's periphery and Lee Friedlander's loneliness at the center of the world, Peter Hujar's transsexuals and Larry Clark's boys. While the "concerned photography" of the mid-twentieth century can seem to demand the acceptance of the nonconformist behavior it tracks, and the recognition of social ills, the most recent contributions here avoid those moral undertones, documenting the hedonistic cult of youth, its promiscuity and ideology of fun. They do not judge but may provoke viewers into their own judgments, and always to thought.
Bound in the publisher's original cloth over boards, spine stamped in white. Top fore edge corners are bumped. Dust jacket has light wear at the extremities. Illustrated throughout with 92 full-page black-and-white plates. English language version. Edited by Peter Weiermair.
The watercolors, drawings and print portfolios presented in this publication are not only outstanding examples of their genre, but also an invaluable documentation of social mores and cultural history from the 17th century onwards. These works of erotic art from all over Europe are part of a major private collection built up over a period of many years. The main focus of this particular selection is on lesser known and rarely published material, open to a wide range of possible interpretation. In tracing the history of taboo, secrecy and prohibition, this book gives its readers access to material previously available only to scholars and specialists.
A collection of b&w & color photographs that reflects the current efforts of female photographers to deal with the image of the male body. Includes the work of Dianora Niccolini, Karin Rosenthal, Marsha Burns, Rosella Bellusci, Vera Hernandez Correa, Jaschi Klein, Ernestine Ruben, Sharon Stewart, Nan Goldin, others. 9 1/2" x 11".
Born in Paris in 1911, Louise Bourgeois is one of the great lone wolves of 20th-century art. The work of the sculptress, a resident of New York since 1938, has attracted a steadily growing circle of admirers in the U.S. since the 1970s. The strong interest in her work found its first major expression in the retrospective presented by the New York Museum of Modern Art in 1982. The work itself cannot be appraised from the detached standpoint of cultural evolution or art history, nor is it possible to associate it with any given group of artists (L. Lippard). It is the expression of radical, personal symbolism that at the same time breaks through the boundaries of the personal sphere in its objectification of fundamental feelings and psycho-physical states. This volume contains a series of essays by leading American art historians, who approach her work from a variety of different perspectives. It also includes a complete bibliography on Louise Bourgeois and her work.
Die Ausstellung in der Galerie Elisabeth & Klaus Thoman in Innsbruck präsentiert eine umfassende Werkanthologie von Arnulf Rainer, die Übermalungen von Fotografien aus den 1960er Jahren bis heute umfasst. Diese Arbeiten zeigen Rainers emotionale Reaktion auf Frauenkörper, wobei er durchstreicht, steigert und akzentuiert, oft auf verletzende Weise. Es scheint, als wolle er durch die fotografische Schicht zu seinen Partnerinnen vordringen. Der Prozess der Auseinandersetzung zeigt sich in verschiedenen Formen, von eleganten Linien bis hin zu malerischen Überarbeitungen, wobei die Farbflüsse und -spritzer Assoziationen zu sexuellen Vorgängen hervorrufen. Peter Weiermair beschreibt in seinem einleitenden Text die Vielfalt der Techniken und deren Ausdrucksformen. Andrea Madesta hingegen bietet einen kritischen Blick auf das Frauenbild, das aus Rainers Werk und dessen radikaler Auseinandersetzung mit gesellschaftlichen Werten und Konventionen hervorgeht. Diese Anthologie bietet somit nicht nur einen Rückblick auf Rainers künstlerisches Schaffen, sondern auch eine tiefere Reflexion über die Darstellung von Frauen in der Kunst.