ISBN: HB: 9781588397485

Yale University Press, Metropolitan Museum of Art

May 2022

192 pp.

29,8x20,9 cm

120 colour illus.

HB:
£35.00
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Categories:

Louise Bourgeois

Paintings

An unprecedented look at the little-known paintings from Louise Bourgeois's early years in New York that laid the groundwork for her sculptural practice.

Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010) is celebrated today for her sculptures. Less known – and the focus of this publication – is the body of paintings produced by the artist between her arrival in New York in 1938 and her turn to three-dimensional media in 1949. Crucial to her artistic practice, these early works – rarely seen or exhibited – show Bourgeois's deeply personal artistic lexicon. Themes and motifs explored in her paintings coalesced into those that she would continue to mine during her decades-long career: the clock, the spiral, the Femme Maison (a woman's body with a house for a head), and the columnar figures that heralded her totemic Personage sculptures. Informed by new archival research and the artist's extensive diaries, the book's essays and illustrated chronology explore Bourgeois's relationship to the New York art world of the 1940s – transformed by the arrival of European Surrealists and the emergence of the New York School – and her development of a pictorial language combining abstraction, figuration, and storytelling.

About the author

Clare Davies is assistant curator of modern and contemporary art in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Briony Fer is professor of the history of art at University College London.