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Louise Bourgeois: The Insomnia Drawings (Limited Edition)

Sale price$195.00

Insomnia was a lifelong companion of Louise Bourgeois’s nights. Between November 1994 and June 1995, she committed to paper the thoughts, memories, and images that surfaced during these sleepless hours. The resultant 220 drawings represent the quintessence of the impulses, sources, and motifs that inspired Bourgeois’s work. Originally published in 2001 by Daros and Scalo, this limited edition of ‘The Insomnia Drawings’, presented in two beautifully crafted, cloth-bound, numbered volumes, is newly available courtesy of The Easton Foundation and Hauser & Wirth Publishers.

In the first volume, both sides of each drawing are faithfully reproduced at a 95% scale; Bourgeois composed mostly visual imagery on the drawings’ fronts, and inscribed the backs with poetic writings, aphorisms, and various notes related to the hustle and bustle of everyday life. The accompanying second volume features essays by Marie-Laure Bernadac and Elisabeth Bronfen, alongside a chronology and checklist of works, including full transcriptions of Bourgeois’s writings, which were written in French and English. At once beautiful and disquieting, humorous and passionate, 'The Insomnia Drawings' are unique mirror of an extraordinary artist’s life and work.

A portion of the proceeds from 'Louise Bourgeois: The Insomnia Drawings' will support The Easton Foundation and its ongoing work to preserve and promote the artist’s legacy.

Louise Bourgeois: The Insomnia Drawings (Limited Edition)
Louise Bourgeois: The Insomnia Drawings (Limited Edition) Sale price$195.00

Language

English

Publisher

Scalo and The Daros Collection, with the support of The Easton Foundation and Hauser & Wirth

Composition

Slipcased clothbound, 2 volumes

Contributors

Marie-Laure Bernadac, Elisabeth Bronfen

Pages

580

Size

33 x 26 cm

ISBN

9783908247388

Publication Date

2001

The Artist

LOUISE BOURGEOIS

Born in France in 1911, and working in America from 1938 until her death in 2010, Louise Bourgeois is recognized as one of the most important and influential artists of our time. For over seven decades, Bourgeois’s creative process was fueled by an introspective reality, often rooted in cathartic re-visitations of early childhood trauma and frank examinations of female sexuality. Articulated by recurrent motifs (including body parts, houses and spiders), personal symbolism and psychological release, the conceptual and stylistic complexity of Bourgeois’s oeuvre—employing a variety of genres, media and materials—plays upon the powers of association, memory, fantasy, and fear.

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