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Marisol : Sculptures and Works on Paper

Pacini, MarinaAnthes, Bill(Contributions by)Ashton, Dore(Contributions by)Cullen, Deborah(Contributions by)Dreishpoon, Douglas(Contributions by)
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A highly-anticipated volume that elucidates Marisol's artistic evolution and reestablishes her as a major figure in postwar American art The Paris-born, Venezuelan artist Marisol (b. 1930) burst onto the 1960s New York art scene with large figural sculptures in a wild amalgam of mixed media.

Often satirical, Marisol's art is inspired by sources as diverse as Pre-Columbian art, folk art, Cubism, and Surrealism.

For the past several decades, however, Marisol has shunned the spotlight and her artwork has been overlooked as a result. Accompanying the first retrospective of Marisol's work in more than a decade, this long-awaited and beautifully illustrated volume offers a much-needed corrective, reestablishing her role as a major figure in postwar American art.

Essays by leading scholars of Latin American and 20th-century art explore all facets of her work including her influences, the theme of family, American politics and pop culture, Native American rights and poverty, her role as a female artist, and her relationship to Latin America and Latin American art.

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Product Details
Yale University Press
0300203799 / 9780300203790
Hardback
709.2
01/05/2014
United States
English
190 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour)
30 cm
General (US: Trade) Learn More
Published on the occasion of the exhibition of the same name held at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, 14th June-7th September 2014.