9783775727013-3775727019-Wangechi Mutu: My Dirty Little Heaven

Wangechi Mutu: My Dirty Little Heaven

ISBN-13: 9783775727013
ISBN-10: 3775727019
Edition: Bilingual
Author: Courtney J. Martin, Okwui Enwezor, Friedhelm Hütte, Lauri Firstenberg
Publication date: 2010
Publisher: Hatje Cantz
Format: Hardcover 144 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9783775727013
ISBN-10: 3775727019
Edition: Bilingual
Author: Courtney J. Martin, Okwui Enwezor, Friedhelm Hütte, Lauri Firstenberg
Publication date: 2010
Publisher: Hatje Cantz
Format: Hardcover 144 pages

Summary

Wangechi Mutu: My Dirty Little Heaven (ISBN-13: 9783775727013 and ISBN-10: 3775727019), written by authors Courtney J. Martin, Okwui Enwezor, Friedhelm Hütte, Lauri Firstenberg, was published by Hatje Cantz in 2010. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other Monographs (Individual Artists) books. You can easily purchase or rent Wangechi Mutu: My Dirty Little Heaven (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Monographs books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Kenyan sculptor and anthropologist Wangechi Mutu (born 1972) mines ethnographic photography, fashion, sport, porn and popular-science publications such as National Geographic to develop her fierce critique of the deformation of the female body by consumerism in elegant, tapering spirals of collage and drawing. Mutu refers to her hybrid women as "warrior women" whom she augments and contorts in prosthetic treatments. Often indefinably horrific, Mutu's complexly patterned works are often pitched between decorative abstraction and mutant figuration, and as Klaus Ottman points out in an essay included here, her hybrid creatures evoke "the genocidal horrors inflicted by African rebels in Sierra Leone and Sudanese soldiers in Darfur while also recalling the imaginative heads of Archimboldo; the erotic contortions of Egon Schiele; and the photomontages of Hannah Höch." Mutu's work, presented here in over 130 color images, has advanced a fresh treatment of black female identity, consumer culture and postcolonialism.

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