Now available in paperback, this book includes in-depth examinations of a selection of Louise Bourgeois’ "Cells" while also studying the innovative series in its entirety. Like the majority of Louise Bourgeois’s oeuvre, her "Cells" series is both enigmatic and personal. Preoccupy her attention for nearly 20 years, these complex and sophisticated works are daring and provocative. Many are small enclosures into which the viewer is prompted to peer at arrangements of various objects; others are small rooms into which the viewer is invited to enter. In her "Cells", Bourgeois uses sculptural forms, found objects, and personal items that were significant to her. Six "Cells" from the series are given close attention, revealing the enormous diversity of Bourgeois’s artistic engagement as well as recurring themes of physical and emotional pain, voyeurism, integration, and disintegration. A designated section displays the entire "Cells" series with extensive color reproductions including several details in chronological order. Together with an essay on the evolution of the "Cells" and an interview with the artist’s former assistant, Jerry Gorovoy, this volume offers a holistic appreciation of a crucial phase in Bourgeois’s highly influential career.
My fascination with the artist Louise Bourgeois began when watching the 2008 documentary Louise Bourgeois: The Spider, the Mistress, and the Tangerine. Her mesmerizing process, brusque attitude, and unapologetic honesty were absolutely magnetizing. During her lifetime she created deeply personal, immense sculptures and installations utilizing found objects, metalwork, and textiles. Exploring themes of sexuality and family, she has been categorized as a feminist, minimalist, surrealist, and abstract expressionist, but her ability to move fluidly through these pigeonholes is a testament to her ability. Louise Bourgeois: Structures of Existence: The Cells explores the artist’s installation series created late in her life in which Bourgeois created rooms of experiences that the viewer must enter to experience. Driven by the desire not to be limited by the size or spatial restrictions of a museum these “cells” drastically vary in size and shape and serve to be sort of three-dimensional diary entries that are not restrained in any form of timeline. The volume includes interviews with assistants, fans, and curators, but also descriptions of the work from the woman herself, which allow you understand that Bourgeois was creating these works for herself alone to understand fear, pain, life, and death.
I am a huge fan of Louise Bourgeois.....this book gives a clear history of her artwork, and I love how each chapter is written by a different art critic.