This fiery account of Ana Mendieta is also a snapshot of the turbulent times in which she lived. In exile from revolutionary Cuba, Ana Mendieta found in the 1960s US another kind of social upheaval: Frida Kahlo was finally being appreciated as an artist, not just a muse; Valerie Solanas wrote her manifesto, then shot Andy Warhol; Carolee Schneemann performed nude and pulled a feminist scroll out of her vagina. And Ana Mendieta began creating what she called "earth-body art," revolutionary work that explored issues of gender and cultural activity. In 1985, at the height of her success, she plunged to her death from the window of the New York City apartment she shared with her husband, artist Carl Andre. He was tried and acquitted of her murder.
These vibrantly drawn pages chronicle how the women's art movement changed the way we look at the female body in art and in the world. Redfern and Caron bring luminaries and the conflicts that inspired them to blazing life, telling us not only who is Ana Mendieta, but why we need to know.
Author: Christine Redfern
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Feminist Press
Published: 06/14/2011
Series: Blindspot
Pages: 84
Weight: 0.65lbs
Size: 9.10h x 7.30w x 0.40d
ISBN: 9781558617032
Audience: Young Adult
About the AuthorChristine Redfern is an artist living and working in Montreal. Her drawings and animations have been screened and exhibited internationally. Her writing has appeared in local, national and international publications, such as:
The Montreal Mirror,
Canadian Art, ,
Globe & Mail,
National Post,
ARTnews, and
Contemporary in London. Her interviews with contemporary artists appear each Saturday in the
Montreal Gazette, where she is currently the writer on visual arts.
Illustrator, painter, and cartoonist,
Caro Caron has also been a body painter and a professional make-up artist for the past fifteen years. Published notably in the
Cyclops anthologies,
King Can, comix,
Awaye Dzigidzine!,
Mr. Ferraille and
Hôpital Brut (Dernier Cri).
Lucy Lippard is an internationally known curator, artist, and writer. Her awards and fellowships include: the Guggenheim Fellowship, the Frank Mather Award, and two National Endowment for the Arts in criticism. Lippard has written twenty books and written art criticism for
Art in America, the
Village Voice,
In These Times, and
Z Magazine. She has also curated over 50 exhibitions and founded artist organizations such as Printed Matter, the Heresies Collective, Political Art Documentation/Distribution, and Artists Call against US Intervention in Central America.