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Yinka Shonibare MBE

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Shonibare employs a wide range of media - sculpture, painting, photography, video and installation pieces - to explore matters of race, class, cultural identity, and history.

The artist is best-known for his use of a colourful batik fabric, which, though labeled as 'African', actually originates in Indonesia and was introduced to Africa by British manufacturers via Dutch colonisers in the nineteenth century.

Incorporating the fabric into Victorian dresses, covering sculptures of alien figures with it or stretching it onto canvases, Shonibare uses the fabric as a metaphor to address issues of origin and authenticity.Published as a companion to Shonibare's first retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia, and the Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York, this survey explores all aspects of Shonibare's work, offering a fully comprehensive portrait of his projects.

Whether he is lampooning Victorian propriety or commenting on the latent ambiguities of the term 'alien', Shonibare makes art that challenges straightforward interpretations. Essays by Rachel Kent and Robert Hobbs, together with a generous selection of colour illustrations explore this talented young artist's work.

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Product Details
Prestel
3791341235 / 9783791341231
Hardback
709.2
05/11/2008
Germany
English
224 p. : ill. (chiefly col.)
30 cm
General (US: Trade) Learn More
Published to accompany the exhibition of the same name held at the Museum of Contemporary art, Sydney, N.S.W., 24 Sept. 2008-1 Feb. 2009, Brooklyn Museum, New York, 26 June-20 Sept., 2009, and the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., 11 Nov. 2009-7 Mar. 2010.