Incarnate
Publisher: London, Booth-Clibborn 1998Description: 220p. ill.[chielfly col.] 30cm001: 6693ISBN: 1861540485Subject(s): SculptureItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 730.9 QUI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 076323 |
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730 YOO Decoding dictatorial statues / | 730.9 CHE Sculpture of the world: a history | 730.9 KEU Sculpture Renaissance to Rococo | 730.9 QUI Incarnate | 730.92 HAR Irving Harper : works in paper / | 730.92 WAL Richard Deacon / | 730.924 KAP Anish Kapoor : turning the world upside down. |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Marc Quinn - famous for his sculpture Self, a cast of the artist's head filled with nine pints of his own frozen blood - is a leading representative of the young British artists who have inspired both reverence and revulsion worldwide. This work is a comprehensive overview of the sculptural pieces which have established him as a challenging artist of his generation. It contains illustrations of his work, including Self, Emotional Detox, The Blind Leading the Blind and Frozen Frog Sculpture, alongside some of his less well known pieces. Accompanying the images is a story by Will Self and essays by the art historian and critic Mark Gisbourne and David Thorpe, curator of the South London Gallery. Also included is a transcript of a conversation between Quinn and the musician Brian Eno.
Published for exhibition May 30-July 4 New York
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