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Results for 'zoe whitley'
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Sue Williamson
There’s Something I Must Tell You A Retrospective Exhibition€ 62,50 -
Fiction Non Fiction
Volume 1€ 21,95 -
Lubaina Himid: Make Do and Mend
Part of the difficulty with living in the time of the modern nation-state is that while you matter to those who manage it, you don’t matter nearly as much as you do to yourself or to your intimates. Lubaina Himid, through her 'strategy paintings' on display in the exhibition 'Make Do And Mend,' looks at the functionaries who wield this depersonalized, dehumanized perspective and, importantly, looks from their vantage point.
€ 52,50 -
Simnikiwe Buhlungu: Besides Puleng; Dontsa-Ring and Roving Preoccupations
Buhlungu's installation creates a porous space where both water and scientific knowledge can move freely Delving into microbiology through the disciplines of art, science, geography and history, Simnikiwe Buhlungu (born 1995) uses the ubiquitous water puddle as the basis for her mixed-media installation hygrosummons, exploring encounters with scientific knowledge.
€ 27,50 -
Jack Whitten: Notes from the Woodshed
Jack Whitten (1939–2018) was born in Bessemer, Alabama, and studied art at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where he became involved in civil rights demonstrations. From 1960 to 1964 he studied art at Cooper Union, New York, falling in with the abstract expressionists of the day (Willem de Kooning was a particular influence and mentor). The Whitney mounted a solo exhibition of his paintings in 1974; in 1983 the Studio Museum in Harlem held a 10-year retrospective. In 2014, a retrospective exhibition was organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art in San Diego, traveling to the Wexner Center for the Arts in 2015 and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in 2015 and 2016. Whitten lived in Queens, New York, where he died on January 20, 2018.
€ 41,50 -
Winfred Rembert
Zoé Whitley is an art historian and curator who has been director of Chisenhale Gallery since 2020. Based in London, she has held curatorial positions at the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Tate galleries, and the Hayward Gallery. Reginald Dwayne Betts is the founder and director of the Freedom Reads. A poet and lawyer, he is the author of four books. A 2021 MacArthur Fellow, his latest collection of poetry, Felon, was awarded the American Book Award and an NAACP Image Award. Dan Berger is an author and historian of activism, Black Power, prisons and the carceral state.
€ 38,95 -
Joshua Leon: The Process
Joshua Leon’s first book accompanies his new commission at Chisenhale Gallery, London. The outcome of two years of writing and documenting his own research processes, the publication comprises original writing by Leon alongside archival imagery. Tracing history, memory and self across time and site, the text traverses locations including a synagogue in Bordeaux, an American bar in Vienna and a veneer factory in London’s East End to reflect on the experiences of the Jewish diaspora in Europe and the formation of contemporary Jewish identity. Throughout, archival materials and images collected by Leon–architectural blueprints, immigration documents, musical scores and family photographs–visually trace slippages between personal and wider social histories. At once a fragment, a memoir and poetic prose, The Process details the varied ideas, intellectual figures and experiences that coalesce in Leon’s work, whilst complicating the role of artistic production in acts of repair, restoration and remembrance.
€ 21,95 -
Benoît Piéron: Slumber Party
Inspired by his own illnesses, Piéron transforms hospital supplies into imaginative installations French artist Benoît Piéron (born 1983) has spent most of his life in hospitals undergoing treatment for several immune diseases. In Slumber Party, he incorporates bedsheets, ambulance sirens and stuffed animals into his works, applying softness to the hard spaces of a hospital.
€ 28,50 -
Barkley L. Hendricks
Box Set€ 166,50 -
Lotus Laurie Kang: In Cascades
Lotus Laurie Kang holds an MFA from the Milton Avery School of the Arts at Bard College. Selected exhibitions include: Do Redo Repeat, Catriona Jeffries, Vancouver (2022); 2021 Triennial: Soft Water Hard Stone, New Museum, New York (2021), Her Own Devices, Franz Kaka, Toronto (2020); Total Disbelief, Sculpture Center, New York (2019), If I Have A Body, Remai Modern, Saskatoon (2019); Beolle, Oakville Galleries, Oakville (2019), Formula 1: A Loud, Low Hum, Cue Art Foundation, New York (2019); Labor Relations, Wroclaw Contemporary Museum, Wroclaw (2016); The Mouth Holds The Tongue, The Power Plant, Toronto (2015).
€ 48,50 -
Barkley L. Hendricks: Solid!
From revolutionizing portraiture to redefining the nude, Barkley L. Hendricks (1945-2017) is rightly known among the foremost American figurative painters of the late 20th century. Yet his six-decade artistic oeuvre encompasses not only large-scale canvases of distinctively dressed (or undressed) individuals, but also includes evocative landscapes, hard-edged geometric abstractions, lush watercolors on paper and singular photographs informed by his studies with Walker Evans. This definitive volume spans all aspects of the artist's practice--probing his photographic experimentation as a forbear to contemporary street photography; celebrating his great sensitivity as a colorist whose unique expertise seamlessly combines oil-based and water-based pigments to evoke time and place; highlighting the observational genuineness in his provocative and personal interpretations of women, of unapologetically visible queer identities, and of his own beloved black communities across the African Diaspora. Socially urgent and aesthetically powerful, Barkley L. Hendricks is lavishly illustrated by dozens of previously unpublished works. Original texts from contributors allow for the critical proximity of scholars who called Hendricks a friend: art historian Dr. Richard Powell (Duke University) and Trevor Schoonmaker (Director, Nasher Museum of Art); those for whom he was a living inspiration: fashion designer and curator Duro Olowu and Dr. Zoé Whitley (Director, Chisenhale Gallery); and ushers in new discursive perspectives from award-winning graphic novelist and Professor John Jennings (Media & Cultural Studies, University of California, Riverside) and independent curator and writer Susan Thompson (formerly of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum). Like Hendricks himself, this highly anticipated catalogue is deeply researched, multifaceted, insightful, and surprising. Readers who think they know the totality of Hendricks will be left in no doubt of his expansive uniqueness and yes, his peerless acuity as a portraitist.
€ 65,50 -
Suki Seokyeong Kang (Bilingual edition)
Willow Drum OrioleBased in Seoul, SUKI SEOKYEONG KANG (*1977) studied Painting at Ewha Womans University in Seoul and at London’s Royal College of Art. In 2018, Kang won the Baloise Art Prize at Art Basel. She has had solo exhibitions at Buk-Seoul Museum of Art (2019-2020), MUDAM Luxembourg (2018), ICA Philadelphia (2018) and her works have been featured in group exhibitions at MCA Chicago (2021), the Venice Biennale (2019), the Shanghai Biennale (2018), the Gwangju Biennale (2018), and the Liverpool Biennial (2018).
€ 66,50