• Business
  • Markets
  • Politics
  • Crypto
  • Finance
  • Intelligence
    • Policy Intelligence
    • Security Intelligence
    • Economic Intelligence
    • Fashion Intelligence
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Taxes
  • Creator Economy
  • Wealth Management
  • LBNN Blueprints
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Politics
  • Crypto
  • Finance
  • Intelligence
    • Policy Intelligence
    • Security Intelligence
    • Economic Intelligence
    • Fashion Intelligence
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Taxes
  • Creator Economy
  • Wealth Management
  • LBNN Blueprints

from a queer Claude Cahun graphic novel to veteran critic Richard Cork’s encounters with artists

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
September 5, 2023
in Art & Culture
0
from a queer Claude Cahun graphic novel to veteran critic Richard Cork’s encounters with artists
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Liberated: The Radical Art and Life of Claude Cahun, Kaz Rowe, Getty Publications, 96pp, $19.95 (hb)

The pioneering artists Lucy Schwob and Suzanne Malherbe—better known by their alter egos Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore—outfoxed the Nazis during the Second World War. This young adult graphic novel throws light on Cahun’s upbringing, her links to the Surrealism movement in 1920s Paris—a period when Surrealist André Breton would become a lifelong friend—and crucially how she and Malherbe, her partner, defied German invaders during the Second World War on the British Channel Island of Jersey. Parts of the novel also highlight how the pair challenged gender roles with, for example, Cahun saying: “Neuter is the only gender that always suits me… I wanted to shake off every chain society had ever placed on me.”

Andy Warhol, Mick Jagger, 1975

© 2023 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the VisualArts, Inc. / Licensed by ArtistsRights Society (ARS), New York

In A Time of Witness, DK Nnuro (editor), University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, 240pp, $70 (hb)

Poetry meets painting in this publication that brings together 31 celebrated poets and authors, including multiple Pulitzer Prize winners, who create literary works in dialogue with the encyclopaedic collection of the University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art. The US author Carmen Maria Machado, creator of the memoir In the Dream House, responds, for instance, to Ana Mendieta’s 1977 work Thesis Triptych (Imagen de Yagul, Silueta Tehuana, and Ix-Chell), which formed part of the late artist’s MA thesis at the University of Iowa. Meanwhile A.M. Homes, whose publications include The Unfolding, responds to Andy Warhol’s Mick Jagger painting (1975) with the piece Eating Oysters with Andy–A Fictional Interview Based on Real Events.

The Circulating Lifeblood of Ideas: Leo Steinberg’s Library of Prints, Holly Borham (editor), Blanton Museum of Art, 164pp, $39.95 (pb)

The critic and academic Leo Steinberg amassed a vast collection of prints on his meagre salary as a part-time history professor, acquiring woodcuts, engravings and lithographs made mainly between 1500 and 1800. In 2002, Steinberg made waves when he sold his encyclopaedic holdings to the Blanton Museum of Art in Texas which launched an exhibition of the collection in 2021. “Steinberg’s scholarship and collecting ranged from Michelangelo and Leonardo to Diego Velázquez and Pablo Picasso… This collection is unique not only because of its broad scope but also for the way it allows a chronological exploration of technical developments in the history of prints,” writes Simone Jamille Wicha, the director of Blanton Museum of Art.

The cover of Encounters with Artists

Courtesy Thames & Hudson

Encounters with Artists, Richard Cork, Thames & Hudson, 224pp, £26 (hb)

The stalwart UK art critic Richard Cork, previously of The Times and Evening Standard, has been around the art world block. “Through a series of frank interviews, some scheduled, others serendipitous, he uncovers artists’ inner thoughts, anxieties and creative ambitions,” says a publisher’s statement. On meeting Picasso in 1965 at a café in Cannes, Cork describes his nerve-wracking encounter with the fabled octogenarian artist. “Nervously handing over my sketchpad and black pen, I watched him appraise the size of the page and then, with phenomenal speed, write his surname along the top,” Cork writes. Other artists receiving the Cork treatment include Jasper Johns, Louise Bourgeois, Sonia Boyce and Gerhard Richter.

A spread from Seen in the Mirror: Things in the Cartin Collection

Photo: Madison Carroll; courtesy David Zwirner Books

Seen in the Mirror: Things in the Cartin Collection, Luke Syson and Steven Holmes (contributors), David Zwirner Books, 208pp, £55 (hb)

The New York-based collector Mickey Cartin is one of the original pioneers of collecting across categories, and has assembled a notable haul of Renaissance and Modernist paintings, Old Master prints, sculptures, illuminated manuscripts and contemporary works. An exhibition of Cartin’s collection at Zwirner gallery in New York in 2021 included works by artists such as Joseph Cornell, Giorgio Morandi and Sol LeWitt. “This publication includes additional works from Cartin’s trove along with views of his home, conveying how he lives and engages day-to-day with these works,” says a publisher’s statement. Texts by the curator of the Cartin Collection, Steven Holmes, and the director of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, UK, Luke Syson, give further insights into Cartin’s collecting tastes and strategies.

Picasso’s War: How Modern Art Came to America, Hugh Eakin, Penguin, 480pp, $20 (pb)

This new paperback edition focuses on the exhibition Picasso: Forty Years of His Art at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1939, which transformed how audiences in the United States viewed Modern art. “For nearly 30 years, the effort to bring Modern art to the United States was continually impeded by war, economic crisis, and a deeply sceptical public. It was a project that might well have foundered, and almost did, but for the fanatical determination of a tiny group of people [such as MoMA founder, Alfred Barr],” Eakin writes. Louis Menand says in The New Yorker, meanwhile, that the publication “isn’t really about Picasso, or about war, or about art. Its subject is the creation of a market for a certain product, Modern art.”

Source link

Related posts

Something is Terribly Wrong With Fridababy and its Baby-Sexualizing Ads

Something is Terribly Wrong With Fridababy and its Baby-Sexualizing Ads

February 20, 2026
Epstein Files: Is “Jerky” Code For Human Meat?

Epstein Files: Is “Jerky” Code For Human Meat?

February 13, 2026
Previous Post

Max Q: An inside look at Astra’s Apollo Fusion acquisition

Next Post

8 Ways to Become the Exceptional Leader That People Actually Want to Follow

Next Post
8 Ways to Become the Exceptional Leader That People Actually Want to Follow

8 Ways to Become the Exceptional Leader That People Actually Want to Follow

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

A strategic innovation to boost restaurant sales

A strategic innovation to boost restaurant sales

1 year ago
Market Outlook – Q3 2025

Market Outlook – Q3 2025

5 months ago
Starlink Becomes Nigeria’s Second-Largest ISP with over 65k Subscribers

Starlink Becomes Nigeria’s Second-Largest ISP with over 65k Subscribers

12 months ago
AI companies are merging or collaborating to even out gap in access to vital datasets

AI companies are merging or collaborating to even out gap in access to vital datasets

2 years ago

POPULAR NEWS

  • Ghana to build three oil refineries, five petrochemical plants in energy sector overhaul

    Ghana to build three oil refineries, five petrochemical plants in energy sector overhaul

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mahama attends Liberia’s 178th independence anniversary

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The world’s top 10 most valuable car brands in 2025

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Top 10 African countries with the highest GDP per capita in 2025

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Global ranking of Top 5 smartphone brands in Q3, 2024

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Get strategic intelligence you won’t find anywhere else. Subscribe to the Limitless Beliefs Newsletter for monthly insights on overlooked business opportunities across Africa.

Subscription Form

© 2026 LBNN – All rights reserved.

Privacy Policy | About Us | Contact

Tiktok Youtube Telegram Instagram Linkedin X-twitter
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Markets
  • Crypto
  • Economics
    • Manufacturing
    • Real Estate
    • Infrastructure
  • Finance
  • Energy
  • Creator Economy
  • Wealth Management
  • Taxes
  • Telecoms
  • Military & Defense
  • Careers
  • Technology
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Investigative journalism
  • Art & Culture
  • LBNN Blueprints
  • Quizzes
    • Enneagram quiz
  • Fashion Intelligence

© 2023 LBNN - All rights reserved.