
Chris Ofili: Devil's Pie
by Chris Ofili, Klaus Kertess, Cameron Shaw
- Tytuł oryginalny
- Atomic Habits
- Język oryginału
- Angielski
- Liczba stron
- 320
- Wydawnictwo
- Avery
O tej książce
Few artists' names can connote such diverse associations as the Virgin Mary, Rudolph Giuliani and elephant dung. (Put thus, it seems rather an achievement.) Controversy tends to dog the art of Chris Ofili, and former New York Mayor Giuliani's suspension of funding for the Brooklyn Museum upon its exhibition of his 1996 painting "The Holy Virgin Mary" in 1999 was but one instance of the ire Ofili routinely arouses. When these occasional media commotions subside, one sees that the work is actually pleasing in more familiar Ofili's surfaces sparkle with smears of glitter and bright veneer, resembling nothing so much as African icons. But Ofili has always been political, specifically in his confrontations with racial cliché, and in his insistent incorporation of materials from popular black culture. Devil's Pie derives its title from singer-songwriter D'Angelo's 1998 lyric meditation on temptation and retribution. According to the song, the ingredients of a devil's pie include "materialistic, greed and lust, jealousy, envious / bread and dough, cheddar cheese, flash and stash, cash and cream." Similarly diverse in its references and dichotomies, Ofili's work contains contradictions. This catalogue collects his work in sculpture, painting, printmaking and graphite drawing for the first time and includes texts by art writer and curator Klaus Kertess and writer Cameron Shaw.
Więcej od Chris Ofili
Form Follows Fiction
Amy Adler, Kara Walker, Chris Ofili, Cai Guo-Qiang, Gregory Crewdson, Olafur Eliasson, Matthew Ritchie, Takashi Murakami, Doug Aitken, John Currin, Sue Webster, Tim Noble, Ida Gianelli, Mariko Mori, Gabriel Orozco, Pipilotti Rist, Vanessa Beecroft, Franz Ackermann, Kurt Kauper, Toba Khedoori, Margherita Manzelli, Matthieu Laurette
Painting People: Figure Painting Today
Chris Ofili, Lucian Freud, Eric Fischl, George Condo, Barnaby Furnas, Dana Schutz, Chuck Close, Amy Cutler, Christoph Ruckhäberle, Neo Rauch, Elizabeth Peyton, Luc Tuymans, Jenny Saville, Peter Doig, John Currin, Lisa Yuskavage, Margherita Manzelli, Aya Takano, Jun Hasegawa, Cecily Brown, Marlene Dumas, Daniel Richter, Eberhard Havekost, Charlotte Mullins, Marcel Dzama, Inka Essenhigh, Cheri Samba, Laylah Ali, Wilhelm Sasnal, Jules De Balincourt, Glenn Brown, Wangechi Mutu, Martin Maloney, Philip Akkerman, Michaël Borremans, Jocelyn Hobbie, Dawn Mellor, Djamel Tatah, Mamma Andersson, Yi Chen, Mari Sunna, Zhang Xiaogang, Hernan Bas, Yan Pei-Ming, Nicola Tyson, Mika Kato, Chantal Joffe, Anna Bjerger, Holly Coulis, Rui Matsunaga
The New Gatekeepers: Emerging Challenges to Free Expression in the Arts
Cass R. Sunstein, Jeff Koons, Robert Mapplethorpe, Louis Menand, Richard Serra, Amy Adler, Damien Hirst, Carol Becker, Roger Newman, Rochelle Gurstein, Jock Sturges, Michael Brenson, Kara Walker, Tom Sachs, Edouard Manet, Jake Chapman, Dinos Chapman, Andres Serrano, Auguste Rodin, Chris Ofili, Carolee Schneemann, Timothy Cahill, Mark Schapiro, Renee Cox, Laura Ferguson, Dread Scott, Charles Mann, Steven Tepper, Marian Godfrey
1995 Biennial Exhibition
John Ashbery, Klaus Kertess, Whitney Museum