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Frank Bowling - Sculpture

Frank Bowling (1934-)

This is the first publication to examine Frank Bowling’s art and ideas in relation to sculpture. An extended essay by Sam Cornish charts his interactions with sculpture since the 1960s, beginning with his shaped canvas Swan (1964), which was first displayed with ribbons and an anchor hanging from it. The text also considers Bowling’s time in New York in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when he was involved with debates around Black art and the work of a number of African American sculptors.
The book asks how Bowling’s sculpture extends our understanding of his pictorial language. Considering this relationship also highlights the importance of sculpture to high modernism, from which Bowling’s mature art emerged. Bowling is one of a number of high modernist painters—including Jules Olitski, Kenneth Noland and Helen Frankenthaler—who also made sculpture, complicating perceptions of high modernism as a tendency associated primarily with painting.
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Emne Skulptur
Kunstner Frank Bowling
Forfatter Sam Cornish
Sprog Engelsk
Illustrationer 120 frv. / 5 s/h. ill.
Format / Sideantal 24,5 x 28,5 cm. / 170 s.
Udgivelsesår 2022
Indbinding Indbundet
Forlag Ridinghouse
Antikvarisk
Antal
Køb
ISBN 9781909932746
Lev. 3-5 dage
Frank Bowling (1934-)

This is the first publication to examine Frank Bowling’s art and ideas in relation to sculpture. An extended essay by Sam Cornish charts his interactions with sculpture since the 1960s, beginning with his shaped canvas Swan (1964), which was first displayed with ribbons and an anchor hanging from it. The text also considers Bowling’s time in New York in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when he was involved with debates around Black art and the work of a number of African American sculptors.
The book asks how Bowling’s sculpture extends our understanding of his pictorial language. Considering this relationship also highlights the importance of sculpture to high modernism, from which Bowling’s mature art emerged. Bowling is one of a number of high modernist painters—including Jules Olitski, Kenneth Noland and Helen Frankenthaler—who also made sculpture, complicating perceptions of high modernism as a tendency associated primarily with painting.