Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Louise Bourgeois's powerful, sensuous sculptures out of wood, marble, latex, or glass translate deeply personal feelings into eloquent universal statements. Using childhood memories as a generative device, Bourgeois deals with issues of gender and with such universal themes as sex, anxiety, death, loneliness, and pain. Her diaristic experiments and disturbing imagery related to the body anticipated the post-minimalistic aesthetic arena in which form and style carried associations of human experience and meaning.

Bourgeois's artistic roots lay in the Paris of the 1920s and 1930s, in Art Deco and Surrealism. Born in 1911 in France, she received most of her artistic training in Paris. Having learned to draw as a young woman executing drawings for her family's tapestry restoration business, Bourgeois went on to study art at various schools including the Académie Julian and the studios of Fernand Léger. In 1938 Bourgeois married Robert Goldwater, an American art historian, and moved permanently to New York City. There she continued her association with the European surrealists, but also met the American abstract expressionists. However, her own work remained outside of the mainstream until her longstanding interest in the body, in autobiography, and in vulnerability became driving forces in contemporary art with post-minimalism. Bourgeois has been seen as a link between modernist sculptors such as Constantin Brancusi, Jean Arp, and Alberto Giacometti and postmodernists such as Robert Gober and Kiki Smith. 

Adapted from
  • Suzanne Weaver, "Sainte Sebastienne," in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Charles Venable (New Haven, NJ: Yale University Press), 302. 
  • Annegreth Nil, DMA unpublished material.

NOTES

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS (list applicable note links)

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS  

IMAGE ASSETS 

WEB RESOURCES 
  • The Guggenheim~Explore Bourgeois' career and life.

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES (digitized/non-digitized)

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

RULES
apply to objects where constituent_name contains Louise Bourgeois
rules_operator
AND
General Description
Louise Bourgeois's powerful, sensuous sculptures out of wood, marble, latex, or glass translate deeply personal feelings into eloquent universal statements. Using childhood memories as a generative device, Bourgeois deals with issues of gender and with such universal themes as sex, anxiety, death, loneliness, and pain. Her diaristic experiments and disturbing imagery related to the body anticipated the post-minimalistic aesthetic arena in which form and style carried associations of human experience and meaning.

Bourgeois's artistic roots lay in the Paris of the 1920s and 1930s, in Art Deco and Surrealism. Born in 1911 in France, she received most of her artistic training in Paris. Having learned to draw as a young woman executing drawings for her family's tapestry restoration business, Bourgeois went on to study art at various schools including the Académie Julian and the studios of Fernand Léger. In 1938 Bourgeois married Robert Goldwater, an American art historian, and moved permanently to New York City. There she continued her association with the European surrealists, but also met the American abstract expressionists. However, her own work remained outside of the mainstream until her longstanding interest in the body, in autobiography, and in vulnerability became driving forces in contemporary art with post-minimalism. Bourgeois has been seen as a link between modernist sculptors such as Constantin Brancusi, Jean Arp, and Alberto Giacometti and postmodernists such as Robert Gober and Kiki Smith. 

Adapted from
  • Suzanne Weaver, "Sainte Sebastienne," in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Charles Venable (New Haven, NJ: Yale University Press), 302. 
  • Annegreth Nil, DMA unpublished material.

Fun Facts
 
Archival Resources
 (digitized/non-digitized)
Web Resources
 
  • The Guggenheim~Explore Bourgeois' career and life.

Notes

tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
@Bilal-Gore
*Contemporary Art
@Courtney
#routed
Surrealist (style or movement): AAT: 300021512
Paris (France): TGN: 7008038
bodies (human and animal components): AAT: 300404640
gender (sociological concept): AAT: 300411835
deaths: AAT: 300151836
Postminimalism: AAT: 300112731
sexuality: AAT: 300055187
pain (sensation): AAT: 300055182
Académie Julian: ULAN: 500310043
memory: AAT: 300254803
anxiety: AAT: 300055154
Bourgeois_Louise: ULAN: 500057350
Leger_Fernand: ULAN: 500027374
source file
artists_and_designers-0098.xml.nores