LRB Magazine »
14 Bury Place, London, WC1A 2JL. 020 7269 9030 | Home | Your Cart | Contact | Help | Cake Shop | Listen | World Lit Weekend
Printable version  |

£2.75

LRB Article PDF: Don't you cut your lunch up when you're ready to eat it? (<i>LRB</i> volume 24 number 07, 4 April 2002) 

LRB Article PDF: Don't you cut your lunch up when you're ready to eat it? (LRB volume 24 number 07, 4 April 2002)

Linda Nochlin

Louise Bourgeois is one of the two pre-eminent sculptors working today; the other is Richard Serra, whose sculpture - single-minded, monolithic, public - offers the most striking contrast to hers in both form and content. Serra is Isaiah Berlin's hedgehog exemplified in heavy metal: Louise Bourgeois is the fox, an artist of many devices, to borrow a Homeric epithet which suits her perfectly. Bourgeois's career is marked by an almost infinite variety, ranging from direct carving, primitivism and elegant surfaces in the work of the late 1940s and early 1950s - 'Brancusi meets Giacometti meets Arp meets a ghostly family in a Dogon village,' as Anne Wagner has put it - to the deliberately regressive work of the 1960s: muddy twists of plaster or latex, reminiscent of entrails, faeces or other bodily excrescences. These in turn led to the production of such icons of the informe as Fillette of about 1968, a 'two-foot-long latex phallus hung from a hook', in the words of Mignon Nixon writing in October, and the exemplary rough-surfaced, double-headed (or double-buttocked or breasted) Janus fleuri, Surrealist in its metamorphic perversity but classical in its reference and its bronze symmetry.

LRB 4 April 2002 | PDF Download

Quantity 1 (this product is downloadable) Add to cart

Send to a friend

*

*

*


Send to a friend

Your cart

Cart is empty

View cart | Checkout

Customer Login



  Log in 

Recover password
Register for an account

Forthcoming events

February

John Lanchester

Thursday 11 February at 7.00 p.m.

Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett

Thursday 25 February at 7.00 p.m.

March

Evan Parker and Mark Wastell

Thursday 4 March at 7.00 p.m.

London Review of Books Winter Lectures

LRB Winter Lectures - The Rhetoric of War and Intervention

Monday 15 February at 6.30 p.m.


More Events..

Free Email Newsletter

Regular news and offers from the London Review Bookshop


Type the characters in the picture (enable images in your browser options if you can't see a picture):

Get a different code

Subscribe Go



Find us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

Bookshop image