Item #169163 Mona Hatoum: Terra Infirma. Michelle White, Adaniyah Shivli, Anna Chave, Rebecca Solnit.
Mona Hatoum: Terra Infirma

Mona Hatoum: Terra Infirma

Houston: Menil Collection, 2017. Hardcover. Illustrated boards with white lettering on a gray inlaid background. 191 pp. Mainly color illustrations. VG+. Item #169163
ISBN: 9780300233148

"The work of London-based artist Mona Hatoum (b. 1952) addresses the growing unease of an ever-expanding world, one that is as technologically networked as it is politically fractured by war and exile. Since the 1980s Hatoum has investigated place, the body, and a minimalist language of form through her sculptures, performances, and installations. Her work explores how shifting geographic borders and institutional structures limit, if not violently define, how we comfortably find a home in the world. She powerfully creates a sense of precariousness through a remarkable variety of materials that are as beautiful as they are dangerous. The fragility of blown glass, strands of hair, woven thread, and delicate beads are often juxtaposed with the menacing severity of steel plates, barbed wire, and knife blades. The artists first major solo exhibition in the United States in twenty years, this show unites a group of major sculptures and installations from American and European collections. The centerpieces of the exhibition are Homebound, 1999, a room size tableaux of kitchen utensils threaded together by a crackling wire of live electricity, and La Grande Broyeuse (Mouli-Julienne x 17), 1999. In La Grande Broyeuse Hatoum has dramatically altered the size of a device designed to slice vegetables. Through her artistic process a banal object associated with the feminine sphere of domesticity becomes a strange and towering beast. Organized by Curator Michelle White, this exhibition focuses on Hatoums investigation of the uncanny as embraced by the Surrealists at the beginning of the 20th century. The uncanny, as conceptualized by Sigmund Freud, is an instance in which something is simultaneously foreign and familiar, evoking a sense of discomfort and even terror. Transforming the everyday through nuanced and playful interventions, the uncanny has long held the power to unsettle a secure sense of place and reality within the history of modern and contemporary art. The Menils Surrealist collection, with its well-known holdings of work by René Magritte, serve as an important backdrop to the exhibition. Mona Hatoum: Terra Infirma is accompanied by a scholarly catalogue with essays by Anna Chave, Adania Shibli, Rebecca Solnit, and Michelle White" -Publisher's Website.

OCLC: 1024103124

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