Formats
Anthologies
99
Audio
310
Catalogues
438
Clothing
23
Editions
31
Ephemera
68
Literary
38
Monographs
191
Posters
298
Video
39
Zines
144

Shop > Artists' Books

Out of Stock
#11533

Marlene Dumas: The Image as Burden

Date
2014
Format
Artists' Books
Size
9.3 × 12 inches
Length
196 pages
Description

Edited by Leontine Coelewij, Kerryn Greenberg, Helen Sainsbury, Theodora Vischer.
Text by Leontine Coelewij, Colm Toibin. Interview by Theodora Vischer.

Marlene Dumas is one of the most prominent and influential painters working today. In an era dominated by the mass media and a proliferation of images, her work is a testament to the meaning and potency of painting. Dumas draws on her expansive visual archive and the nuances of language to create intense, psychologically charged works which explore themes such as sexuality, love, death and guilt, often referencing art history and current affairs. Her paintings and drawings are characterized by their extraordinary expressiveness and sometimes controversial subject matter. This fully illustrated exhibition catalogue accompanies a major exhibition at the Tate Modern, the Stedelijk Museum and the Fondation Beyeler. Surveying the artist’s oeuvre from the mid-70s to the present, it features over 100 of her most important paintings and drawings alongside lesser-known works from the early period of her career. The Image as Burden also includes a new interview with the artist; extracts from previously published but lesser-known texts (some available in English for the first time); and a new short story from prize-winning author Colm Tóibín written in response to the paintings. Essays and texts from a wide range of contributors examine the key themes and motifs in her work and reflect on Dumas’ entire career.
Born in Cape Town, South Africa, in 1953, Marlene Dumas has lived in Amsterdam since 1976. Over the last three decades she has had numerous solo exhibitions throughout Europe and the U.S., including shows at The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and The Museum of Modern Art, New York

  1. Marlene Dumas: The Image as Burden
 

Related Items

  1. Burden of Innocence
  2. Nathalie Quagliotto: Puzzles
  3. Image Bank Archives / Excyclopedia Project / Image Recycle
  4. Alec Finlay: Bynames Handkerchief
  5. Osmos Magazine: Issue 06
  6. Robert Longo: Stand
  7. Pawel Althamer: 2000 Words
  8. David Det Hompson: Word and Image Equations: a Summer Workshop in the Graphic Design Department, Rhode Island School of Design
  9. Mark Lewis: Inventio
  10. Flavio Trevisan: Rohypinol
  11. Image Bank: International Image Exchange Directory
  12. General Idea and Image Bank: Golden Streams: Artists’ Collaboration and Exchange in the 70’s
  13. Primitive Beast, Language
  14. David Horovitz: Mood Disorder
  15. Aperture 216: Fashion
  16. Ian Wallace: The First documenta, 1955
  17. Emily Jacir & Susan Buck-Morss
  18. Notes on Georg Simmel’s Lessons, 1906/07, and on a “Sociology of Art,“ c. 1909
  19. Erkki Kurenniemi
  20. Christoph Menke: Aesthetics of Equality
  21. Jalal Toufic: Reading, Rewriting Poe’s “The Oval Portrait“
  22. G.M. Tamás: Innocent Power
  23. Paul Ryan: Two Is Not a Number, A Conversation with Ayreen Anastas and Rene Gabri
  24. Péter György: The Two Kassels
  25. Kenneth Goldsmith: Letter to Bettina Funcke
  26. David Robbins: Concrete Comedy: An Alternative History of Twentieth-Century Comedy
  27. Angela Bulloch: Source Book 10
  28. Source Book 5 / 2008 Geoffrey Farmer
  29. Making Art Global, Part 1

The Third Havana Biennial 1989
  30. Animal Spirits
  31. The New Public
  32. Michael Hardt: The Procedures of Love / Die Verfahren der Liebe
  33. It is what it is. Or is it?
  34. Igor Zabel: Contemporary Art Theory
  35. Paul McCarthy: Rebel Dabble Babble
  36. Jon Beacham: The Brother in Elysium - Artwork and Publications 2008-2013
  37. Michael Schmelling: Land Line