Art Books
Claire Dederers Monsters: A Fans Dilemma
By Cynthia PayneThis focuses on the moral failings of artists, many of them men. Hopscotching through a century of art, this takes up the lives of artists who have disappointed Dederer, ranging from Picasso to Hemingway, Virginia Woolf to Sylvia Plath, Nabokov to Doris Lessing, Wagner to Michael Jackson.
Helen Cammocks I Will Keep My Soul
By Briana Ellis-GibbsThis multifaceted book reclaims the archive a space for creative reflection. It brings together poems, historical documents, photographs, and archival documents to illustrate the past, present, and future challenges Black people fight against due to the government's discriminatory laws in Southern America.
Lucy Lippards I See / You Mean
By Rhiannon VoglLippards only novel merges the organization and constraint of minimalist and conceptual art practices with more erogenous, esoteric, even erotic forms. Her collage writing both obscures her real-world subjects and allows her a means by which to have critical reflection on how she was coming to see them.
Steve Lawrences Newspaper
By Noa WesleyAt the time of its publication, Newspapers readership was formed through the community of queer-leaning artists in downtown New York. As an alternative exhibition space for photographers whose work was not being shown in galleries or museums, Newspaper summarized contemporary experience through the disjunctive visual relationships between images.
Hidden in Plain Sight: Selected Writings of Karin Higa
By Yuki HigashinoWhat roles did Asian Americans play in the development of modern art in the United States in the 20th century, and how did our notion of, and prejudice against, Asian American art materialize? A pioneering curator and art historian provides an excellent introduction to this still under-studied chapter in art history through her writings, as well as a poignant reflection on the confounding question of the relationship between identity and art.
Susanna Hellers Beyond Pain, The Last Drawings
By Mira SchorWhen an artist dies before they have fully achieved the critical place their work calls for, a necessary task begins, of sharing their work and creating critical and historical context. Susanna Heller: Beyond Pain, The Last Drawings, compiled, edited, and published by two of Hellers oldest and dearest friends, artist Marlene Dumas and art historian Suzanne Styhler, is the first step in that task of celebrating and contextualizing an important body of work.