COLLECTION NAME:
Visual Resources Teaching Collection
mediaCollectionId
ArtArtHiAAH~7~7
Visual Resources Teaching Collection
Collection
true
Image Record ID:
aahi0009602
image_record_id
aahi0009602
Image Record ID
false
Work Title (display):
Prisons
Image Title:
full view
Work Dates (display):
1945-1947
Work Dates type:
creation
Image Date (display):
2012-04-10
Work Creator (display):
Louise Bourgeois (American, born France, 1911-2010)
Work Creator gender:
female
work_creator_or_agent_gender
female
Work Creator gender
false
Work Creator notes (display):
American sculptor, painter and printmaker of French birth. Her parents ran a workshop in Paris restoring tapestries, for which Bourgeois filled in the designs where they had become worn. She studied mathematics at the Sorbonne before turning to studio arts. In 1938, after marrying Robert Goldwater, an American art historian, critic and curator, she went to New York, where she enrolled in the Art Students League and studied painting for two years with Václav Vytlačil (b 1892). Bourgeois's work was shown at the Brooklyn Museum Print Exhibition in 1939. During World War II she worked with Joan Miró, André Masson and other European expatriates. Although Bourgeois exhibited with the Abstract Expressionistsand, like them, drew from the unconsciousshe never became an abstract artist. Instead, she created symbolic objects and drawings expressing themes of loneliness and conflict, frustration and vulnerability, as reflected in her suite of engravings and parables, He Disappeared into Complete Silence (1947). In 1949 Bourgeois had her first sculpture exhibition, including Woman in the Shape of a Shuttle (19479; New York, Xavier Fourcade), at the Peridot Gallery; this work proved typical of her wooden sculpture and foreshadowed her preoccupations of the following years. Her first sculptures were narrow wooden pieces, such as Sleeping Figure (1950; New York, MOMA), a 'stick' figure articulated into four parts with two supporting poles. Bourgeois soon began using non-traditional media, with rough works in latex and plaster contrasting with her elegantly worked pieces in wood, bronze and marble. In the 1960s and 1970s her work became more sexually explicit, as in the Femme Couteau group (196970; King's Point, NY, J. and E. Spiegel priv. col.) and Cumul I (1969; Paris, Pompidou). The psychological origins of her work are particularly evident in Destruction of the Father (1974; New York, Xavier Fourcade). Bourgeois's work was appreciated by a wider public in the 1970s as a result of the change in attitudes wrought by feminism and Post-modernism. (Grove Art Online Accessed 2008-02-06)
Work Style Period:
20th century
work_styleperiod
20th century
Work Style Period
false
Work Style Period:
Contemporary
work_styleperiod
Contemporary
Work Style Period
false
Work Subject:
fear
subject
fear
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
buildings
subject
buildings
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
cages
subject
cages
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
history (discipline)
subject
history (discipline)
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
birds
subject
birds
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
anxiety
subject
anxiety
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
memory
subject
memory
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
body, human
subject
body, human
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
introspection
subject
introspection
Work Subject
false
Work Subject:
emotions
subject
emotions
Work Subject
false
Work Worktype:
paintings (visual works)
work_type
paintings (visual works)
Work Worktype
false
Work Category (VRC classification):
paintings
work_category__ucbaahvrc_classification_
paintings
Work Category (VRC classification)
false
Work Material and Technique (display):
oil on canvas
Work Measurements (display):
40 in (H) x 20 in (W)
Work Location (Repository or Site) name:
Collection of Louise Bourgeois
Work Location (Repository or Site) role:
owner
Image Source Reproduction citation:
Bourgeois, Louise, Eva Keller, Regula Malin, Robert Storr, and Fontaine J. La. Louise Bourgeois: Emotions Abstracted: Werke/works, 1941-2000. Z�rich: Daros, 2004. Print.
image_source_copy_from_print_name
Bourgeois, Louise, Eva Keller, Regula Malin, Robert Storr, and Fontaine J. La. Louise Bourgeois: Emotions Abstracted: Werke/works, 1941-2000. Z�rich: Daros, 2004. Print.
Image Source Reproduction citation
false
Image Source Reproduction refid:
3-7757-1461-8
Image Source Reproduction page number:
57
Image Source Reproduction plate-figure number:
Fig. 4 (cat. 4)
Image Rights (display):
© Christopher Burke
Image Rights fair use checklist:
1) use of this image is for education and educational research; 2) access is restricted to University of Colorado and Auraria Higher Education Center communities; 3) the original photographer is credited if known; 4) the image is published; 5) the amount of the work in relation to the whole is needed for education or educational research; 6) the number of derivatives is the minimum required for education or educational research; 7) the image has not been found to be reasonably available for sale; 8) duplication of the image does not violate preexisting contracts.
Work Rights (display):
© Louise Bourgeois
Terms of Agreement and Conditions of Use:
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Holding Institution:
University of Colorado at Boulder
Collection:
Art and Art History Visual Resources Collection
Collection info and contact:
For information about this collection, see . For specific questions, suggestions, or corrections about the descriptive data for images, contact aahvrc@colorado.edu. Please include the Image Record ID ('aahi' followed by a 7-digit number) for each image in question.