986 resultados para Louise Bourgeois
Resumo:
411 p. : il., col.
Resumo:
O trabalho denominado como autobiográfico é diverso na sua forma, podendo ser uma manifestação de cariz artístico, literário ou filosófico. A presente dissertação procura investigar as particularidades da forma autobiográfica, os objectivos do autor perante a sua obra e a sua recepção no campo público. Para tal, traz-se para análise: a obra escultórica de Louise Bourgeois para chegar a um entendimento sobre a forma artística da autobiografia; os Cadernos do Subterrâneo de Fiódor Dostoiévski que é exemplo controverso de uma obra autobiográfica literária; e as Confissões de Jean- Jacques Rousseau e Santo Agostinho que nos permitem experienciar uma obra autobiográfica com preocupações características de uma investigação filosófica. Pretende-se compreender a autobiografia na sua generalidade, tanto do ponto de vista do autor como do seu receptor.
Resumo:
Tesis (Maestría en Artes con Acentuación en Artes Visuales) UANL, 2010.
Resumo:
Pour respecter les droits d’auteur, la version électronique de ce mémoire a été dépouillée de ses documents visuels et audio-visuels. La version intégrale du mémoire a été déposée au Service de la gestion des documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal
Resumo:
Informed by Kristeva's formulation of affect and Winnicott's Holding Environment, this practice-led visual art project is an exploration into how sensitivity to the physical sensation of trembling can sustain a creative practice. Building upon this is a further enquiry into what the significance of the affective experience of trembling is for an ethics of affect in contemporary art. I have done this through object and video-based installations informed by my own experience of trembling. This has been further informed by the work of artists like Louise Bourgeois, Dennis Del Favero and Willie Doherty. The creative outcomes contribute to the discourse around ethical responses to affect by extending and developing on the works of these artists.
Resumo:
Como viene siendo habitual en las últimas películas de Pedro Almodóvar, las imágenes de La piel que habito (2011) se organizan en programas iconográficos que en este caso emanan de operaciones “trans” realizadas tanto en el cuerpo (transexualidad, transgénesis y trasplante), como en el texto (transtextualidad). El presente trabajo se ocupa de la genealogía y formalización de dichos programas así como de cuestiones teóricas surgidas a lo largo del desarrollo de este estudio –la relación entre cuerpo e identidad o el llamado muro de pantallas, entre otras–, de indudable calado en el filme.
Resumo:
Para la mentalidad colonialista del siglo XIX la raza negra estaba provista de una extraordinaria sexualidad y lujuria. En la metrópolis el equivalente era la mujer sexuada, la prostituta. En los primeros años del siglo XX este tándem, prostituta-colonizado, sirve a los artistas vanguardistas como elemento de confrontación con la moral imperante. Son las artistas mujeres, con una intención feminista, quienes principalmente utilizan el primitivismo asociado a la mujer en su crítica a los estereotipos. Figura pionera en ello es Hannah Höch, especialmente en su serie De un Museo Etnográfico, en el que asocia figuras femeninas y objetos de arte primitivo. En los años 70 del siglo XX, algunas artistas de la performance, como Carolee Schneemann o Ana Mendieta reivindican el cuerpo femenino con el significado de Origen y Fertilidad que tiene en las culturas primitivas. En este mismo contexto puede inscribirse la escultura Maman de Louise Bourgeois. El elemento de crítica social, que está vigente aún en nuestros días, puede verse en las obras de las Guerrilla Girls.
Resumo:
Remerciements -- Introduction : pour une plus grande reconnaissance de la recherche innovante en éducation / Isabelle Carignan, Marie-Christine Beaudry, François Larose --Assurer la rigueur scientifique de la recherche-action / Louise Bourgeois -- Enseigner la lecture au primaire :un aperçu des pratiques d’enseignants des 2e et 3e cycles du primaire./ Pascale Thériault, Nadine Laurin -- Recherche-action-formation au préscolaire et au 1er cycle du primaire :pistes méthodologiques / Lizanne Lafontaine --Intégration de la multimodalité dans les projets d’innovation de stagiaires en formation / Nathalie Lacelle, Amal Boultif -- Dispositif didactique pour développer la lecture littéraire au deuxième cycle du secondaire / Marie-Christine Beaudry.
Resumo:
Incluye material multimedia como videos y presentaciones. Proyecto ganador del primer Premio Irene 2009
Resumo:
Que corpo é esse? é o título desta dissertação, que encontra uma poética referenciada nos meus desenhos. É o resultado da investigação realizada no mestrado, tendo como objeto de estudo a minha produção plástica do período entre 2001 e 2004. A utilização do desenho como meio para a realização das minhas intenções (idéias, vontades e desejos) foi o instrumento que permitiu a investigação do corpo nos seus mais diferentes aspectos: a representação e apresentação do corpo humano, o meu próprio corpo enquanto artista que realiza o gesto, a ação no desenho, e o corpo do trabalho, que é o desenho propriamente dito. Ressalto que essa reflexão encontrou subsídio teórico em autores como Flávio Gonçalves e Edith Derdyk, que abordam os processos fenomenológicos do desenho. Já para a temática do corpo, tive o embasamento teórico de autores como Paul Schilder, dentro de um viés da concepção de corpo mais holística, e Juan-David Nasio, numa vertente psicanalítica. Como referencial artístico, estabeleci relações da minha produção plástica com o trabalho de Louise Bourgeois e Kiki Smith.
Resumo:
Mais um lançamento da Coleção Propg Digital, por meio do selo Cultura Acadêmica, Mulheres recipientes se configura como uma obra de grande sensibilidade ao realizar a interseção entre a arte e os sentimentos femininos. Resultado da dissertação de mestrado de Flavia Leme de Almeida, é necessário destacar que este livro não se restringe às generalidades de “estudos de gênero”. A proposta aqui extrapola este conceito. A autora faz uma análise múltipla: como a mulher enxerga a vida e como ela se expressa? Como o feminino aparece na arte? A partir destas questões fundamentais ela vai até os povos ancestrais, desvelar as primeiras esculturas votivas de evocação à fertilidade. Em seguida, faz um estudo de artistas mulheres contemporâneas, evidenciando como cada uma exprime suas angústias e experiências através de suas obras, destacando Frida Khalo, Louise Bourgeois, Celeida Tostes, entre outras. Por fim, Flavia Leme faz uma autoavaliação do próprio trabalho como artista, exprimindo seu processo de criação. Mulheres recipientes realiza um estudo corajoso, que não hesita em revelar para o leitor as aflições, pensamentos e projeções do feminino. Ao analisar a arte, este livro toca no íntimo de muitas mulheres e descobre experiências que não poderiam ser conhecidas de outra forma
Resumo:
Sixty artists explore the nocturnal. Curated by Tom Hammick. The evening hour too gives us the irresponsibility which darkness and lamplight bestow. We are no longer quite ourselves. – Virginia Woolf, Street Haunting: A London Adventure, 1930 Towards Night is an exhibition exploring the nocturnal through paintings, prints and drawings by over sixty artists. Drawing on the nineteenth century European Romantic tradition, the show surveys contemporary and historical connections to wonderment and dystopia at dusk, twilight, night and dawn. Towards Night juxtaposes key paintings and prints by Constable, Friedrich, Munch, Nolde, Palmer and Turner, some of the best known visionaries of the Romantic tradition with contemporary artists who work with the transformative aspects of nightfall to convey emotional responses of awe, anxiety and solitude, love and loss, revelry, insomnia, and journey’s end. The exhibition opens with direct and positive responses to the natural world; Marc Chagall’s exotic dreamlike evening in The Poet Reclining (1915) sits close to eighteenth century Indian miniatures depicting brightly painted figures offset against darkening monsoon clouds, and William Crozier’s Balcony at Night, Antibes (2007), of a plant, blue and iridescent against the cool night sky. As the exhibition progresses, the dystopias become darker and more disturbing, and the connections between artists and works intensify: Emma Stibbon’s Rome Aqueduct (2011) takes on a heightened sense of pathos alongside Caspar David Friedrich’s Winter Landscape (1811); Peter Doig’s cinematic Echo Lake (1998) conjures up an increased sense of contemporary angst; and Prunella Clough’s False Flower (1993), a magical tree defying brutalism by growing out of concrete, becomes more miraculous near Night Shift (2015) Nick Carrick’s tomblike high rise. Tom Hammick’s Violetta Alone (2015) and Michael Craig Martin’s Ash Tray (2015), reinforce hedonistic aspects of night-time revelry alongside Four AM, Betsy Dadd’s young woman drinking in the early hours of the morning and L.S. Lowry’s drunken people in a pub in The Crowd (1922). In the final room, a cluster of works explores dreams and insomnia, from Louise Bourgeois’ Spirals (2010) to Munch’s lovers embracing in The Kiss (1902). Tom Hammick, curator of the show said “This exhibition has grown way beyond its original conception, to become a magnificent survey of painting and printmaking from over two hundred years based around the central tenet of night. The exhibition is a kind of painterly response to the way figurative artists use their artistic heroes as starting points for their own work, both compositionally and emotionally.” Artists featured in Towards Night: Christiane Baumgarter, Michael Craig-Martin, Julian Opie, Will Gill, Merlin James, Howard Hodgkin, WillIam Scott, Patrick Caulfield, George Shaw, Stephen Chambers, Basil Beattie, Betsy Dadd, Christopher Le Brun, L.S Lowry, Andrew Cranston, David Willetts, James Fisher, Emma Stibbon, Vija Celmins, William Blake, William Crozier, Tom Hammick, Georgia Keeling, Helen Turner, Humphrey Ocean, Julian Bell, Craigie Aitchison, Mark Wright, Ken Kiff, Matthew Burrows, Andrzej Jackowski, Sarah Raphael, Nick Bodimeade, Nick Carrick, Mary Newcomb, Hurvin Anderson, Peter Doig, Phoebe Unwin, Danny Markey, Sara Lee, Simon Burton, Susie Hamilton, Marc Chagall, Alfred Wallis, Emil Nolde, J.M.W. Turner, Prunella Clough, Samuel Palmer, Louise Bourgeois, Caspar David Friedrich, Alex Katz, Ewan Gibbs, Susie Hamilton, Andrzej Jackowski, Amanda Vesey, Edward Stott, Gertrude Hermes, Rose Wylie, Sidney Nolan, John Constable, J.M.W. Turner, Emil Nolde, Hiroshige, Edvard Munch, Samuel Palmer, Eileen Cooper, Charles Neame-Spencer, Samantha Cary.
Resumo:
This body of photographic work has been created to firstly, explore a new approach to practice-led research that uses an “action genre” approach to reflective practice (Lemke) and secondly, to visually explore human interaction with the fundamental item in life - water. The first of these is based on the contention that to understand the meanings inherent in photographs we cannot look merely at the end result. It is essential to keep looking at the actions of practitioners, and the influences upon them, to determine how external influences affect the meaning potential of editorial photographs (Grayson, 2012). WATER therefore, provides an ideal platform to reflect upon the actions and influences involved in creating work within the photographic genre of photojournalism. It enables this practitioner to reflect on each stage of production to gain a better understanding of how external influences impact the narrative potential within images created. There are multi-faceted influences experienced by photographers who are creating images that, in turn, are part of constructing and presenting the narrative potential of editorial photographs. There is an important relationship between professional photographers and the technical, cultural, economic and institutional forces that impinge upon all stages of production and publication. What results is a greater understanding of technical, cultural, economic and institutional forces that impinge upon all stages of production and publication. Therefore, to understand the meanings inherent in photographs within WATER, I do not look merely at the end result. It provides a case study looking at my actions in the filed, and the influences upon me, to determine how external influences affect the meaning potential of these photographs (Grayson, 2012). As a result, this project adds to the body of scholarship around the definition of Photojournalism, how it has adapted to the current media environment and provides scope for further research into emerging new genres within editorial photography, such as citizen photojournalism. Concurrently, the photographs themselves were created to visually explore how there remains a humanistic desire to interact with the natural form of water even while living a modern cosmopolitan life around it. Taking a photojournalistic approach to exploring this phenomenon, the images were created by “capturing moments as they happened” with no posing or setting up of images. This serendipitous approach to the photographic medium provides the practitioner with at least an attempt to direct the subjectivity contained explicitly in photographs. What results is a series of images that extend the visual dialogue around the role of water within modern humanistic lifestyles and how it remains an integral part of our society’s behaviors. It captures important moments that document this relationship at this time of modern development. The resulting works were exhibited and published as part of the Head On Photo Festival, Australia's largest photo festival and the world's second largest festival in Sydney 20-24 May 2013. The WATER series of images were curated by three Magnum members; Ian Berry, Eli Reed and Chris Steele-Perkins. Magnum is a highly regarded international photographic co-operative with editorial offices in New York, London, Paris and Tokyo. There was a projection of the works as part of the official festival programme, presented to both members of the public and Sydney’s photography professionals. In addition, a sample of images from the WATER series was chosen for inclusion in the Magnum-published hardcover book. References Grayson, Louise. 2012. “Editorial photographs and patterns of practice.” Journalism Practice. Accessed: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17512786.2012.726836#.UbZN-L--1RQ Lemke, Jay. 1995. Textual Politics: Discourse and Social Dynamics. London: Taylor & Francis.
Resumo:
A travel article about food and landscape in Alberta. IN THE remote islands off Canada's east coast, I was given an old rule of survival: If you get lost in the forest, follow the bear tracks and eat what the bears eat, except skunk cabbage. There was no second rule for what to do about the bear, should he also appear. No matter. "Do this and you'll live," it says, "just as we did in the past."...