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  • 259pagine
  • 10 ore di lettura

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A selection of the late Indigenous Australian artist's jubilantly colorful abstractions The Indigenous Australian artist Sally Gabori (c. 1924-2015) began painting late in life, at about the age of 80. Over the course of her 10-year career, she produced around 3,000 paintings, a volume that speaks to the unfettered passion with which she embarked upon her art. Published in conjunction with the artist's first retrospective in France, this monograph features 96 artworks, including the selection of 30 paintings in the exhibition. The book invites further discovery of Gabori's colorful, abstract oeuvre--which is keenly informed by the history of her people, the Kaiadilt--with contributions from Nicolas Evans, a scholar of Kaiadilt culture and friend of Sally Gabori's family, as well as Judith Ryan and Bruce McLean, curators of Indigenous art. These contributors read her practice through the context of Indigenous traditions.

Acquisto del libro

Sally Gabori, Judith A. M. Ryan, Bruce Johnson McLean, Sally Mirdidingkathi Juwarnda Gabori, Nicholas Evans

Lingua
Pubblicato
2022
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(Copertina rigida)
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Metodi di pagamento

Titolo
Sally Gabori
Lingua
Inglese
Formato
Copertina rigida
Pagine
259
ISBN10
2869251726
ISBN13
9782869251724
Serie
Descrizione
A selection of the late Indigenous Australian artist's jubilantly colorful abstractions The Indigenous Australian artist Sally Gabori (c. 1924-2015) began painting late in life, at about the age of 80. Over the course of her 10-year career, she produced around 3,000 paintings, a volume that speaks to the unfettered passion with which she embarked upon her art. Published in conjunction with the artist's first retrospective in France, this monograph features 96 artworks, including the selection of 30 paintings in the exhibition. The book invites further discovery of Gabori's colorful, abstract oeuvre--which is keenly informed by the history of her people, the Kaiadilt--with contributions from Nicolas Evans, a scholar of Kaiadilt culture and friend of Sally Gabori's family, as well as Judith Ryan and Bruce McLean, curators of Indigenous art. These contributors read her practice through the context of Indigenous traditions.