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Louise Bourgeois is one of the most important living American artists. A former studio assistant to Miró, she has became over the past fifty years, a significant presence both as a sculptor and as a printmaker. Her work had its roots in surrealism but is always centered on problems of gender and sexuality. Born in Paris in 1911, Louise Bourgeois was raised as the middle child between two siblings. Prompted by her father to create herself as both a woman and an intellectual, Bourgeois studied mathematics at the Sorbonne before going on to receive her Baccalaureate in philosophy from the University of Paris in 1932. It was this foundation which impelled Bourgeois to pronounce, “I am a scientific person. I believe in psychoanalysis, in philosophy. For me the only thing that matters is the tangible.”
Bourgeois' father not only instilled the importance of an education, but of family values. Yet he created a certain amount of confusion as he carried on a long-term affair with the family tutor. This double set of standards became a central theme in both the art of Louise Bourgeois and her conversation. She once stated that “everything I create comes from something personal; some memory or personal experience.” Bourgeois began her formal artistic training in Paris with Ferdinand Leger. In 1938 she moved to New York. Within the year she married the art historian Robert Goldwater, with whom she had three children. It was during this time that Bourgeois was influenced by the influx of artists to American who had fled Europe during WWII. Tooting Freudian horns, it was the European Surrealists who especially appealed to Bourgeois’ psychoanalytical interests. Bourgeois, like many of the Surrealists, incorporated abstract and organic shapes that acted as sexual metaphors. Some of these images whimsically related to what she called, “the magic and the mystery” of her childhood. Others demonstrated sets of binary oppositions, such as "imprisonment" v. "escape" and "secret" v. "exposed." Bourgeois believed that her art developed as a result of unsatisfied desires.
The art of Louise Bourgeois was created over a span of sixty years. Besides working within a surrealist strain in the late 1930's and early 1940's, she was an important force during the rise of the American Abstract Expressionists in the late 1940's and early 1950's, as well as during the 1960's and 1970's feminist movement. Bourgeois has been called everything from a Minimalist to an “eccentric abstractionist” (by the art historian Lucy Lippard). Bourgeois received an honorary degree from Yale in 1977, and was awarded an Achievement Visual Arts Award by the Woman’s Caucus for the Arts in 1980. Though Bourgeois exhibited in major museums all over the world, she was recognized as primarily a "woman’s artist" until the Museum of Modern Art gave her a one-person show in 1982. It was this show that finally launched Bourgeois to artistic stardom. In 1994, MoMA launched a major retrospective of Bourgeois' complete prints and published a catalogue raisonné to go along with the show
In 1975 Lippard praised Bourgeois as an artist who “despite her apparent fragility survived almost 40 years of discrimination, struggle, intermittent success and neglect in New York’s gladiatorial art arenas.” Bourgeois proved that she was not only a survivor, but an artistically and intellectually competent personality to be reckoned with. (Melissa Banigan contributed to this essay)
Bibliography: General works: Mieke Bal, Louise Bourgeois' Spider: The Architecture of Art-Writing (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press 2001); Louise Bourgeois, Destruction of the Father, Reconstruction of the Father (Cambridge MA: MIT, 1997); Louise Bourgeois and Lawrence Rinder, Louise Bourgeois: Drawings and Observations (Boston: Bulfinch and Berkeley: Universiity of California Art Museum, 1995); Louise Bourgeois with Deborah Wye and William Rubin, Louise Bourgeois (NY: Museum of Modern Art, 1982); Louise Bourgeois, Pensees-Plumes (Paris. Centre Georges Pompidou, 1995); Louise Bourgeois, Sculptures (Melbourne: National Gallery of Victoria, 1995); Rainer Crone and Petrus Graf Schaesberg, Louise Bourgeois: The Secret of the Cells (Munich: Prestel, 1998); Bosco Gallardo, Louise Bourgeois: Memoria y Arquitectura (Madrid: Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sof¡a, 1999); Paulo Herkenhoff, Louise Bourgeois (Rio de Janeiro: Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil 1997); Charlotta Kotik, Louise Bourgeois: The Locus of Memory. Works 1982-1994 (NY: Abrams, 1994); Stuart Morgan, Louise Bourgeois (Cincinnati, OH: The Taft Museum 1987: catalogue of the traveling exhibition at 5 US institutions in all, 1987-89); Jason Smith, ed. Louise Bourgeois (Melbourne: National Gallery of Victoria, 1995).
Prints:Louise Bourgeois, Deborah Wye, and Carol Smith, The Prints of Louise Bourgeois. NY: Museum of Modern Art/Abrams, 1994 (print catalogue raisonné, based upon a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art.
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