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A handsomely produced compendium of Nevelson’s little-known, beautifully austere collages
Despite occupying a significant portion of Louise Nevelson’s (1899-1988) creative output, her collages still today remain largely unexplored, with only a few publications and essays dedicated to them. The fact that this body of work was exhibited only on rare occasions during her lifetime (and always alongside sculpture) is undoubtedly a factor in the delay of full scholarship on the subject. Nonetheless, Nevelson was often quoted commenting that the way I think is collage, and already by 1960, Jean Arp declared in one of his poems that Louise Nevelson has a grandfather, probably without knowing it: Kurt Schwitters, thereby positioning her work within the lineage of avant-garde collage in modern art.
This book gathers an extensive collection of these collages alongside essays by Yuval Etgar and Pia Gottschaller, and a conversation between Gio Marconi and Maria Nevelson.
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A handsomely produced compendium of Nevelson’s little-known, beautifully austere collages
Despite occupying a significant portion of Louise Nevelson’s (1899-1988) creative output, her collages still today remain largely unexplored, with only a few publications and essays dedicated to them. The fact that this body of work was exhibited only on rare occasions during her lifetime (and always alongside sculpture) is undoubtedly a factor in the delay of full scholarship on the subject. Nonetheless, Nevelson was often quoted commenting that the way I think is collage, and already by 1960, Jean Arp declared in one of his poems that Louise Nevelson has a grandfather, probably without knowing it: Kurt Schwitters, thereby positioning her work within the lineage of avant-garde collage in modern art.
This book gathers an extensive collection of these collages alongside essays by Yuval Etgar and Pia Gottschaller, and a conversation between Gio Marconi and Maria Nevelson.