• Media type: Book; Still Image; Exhibition Catalogue; Illustrated Book
  • Title: Henry Taylor - B side
  • Contributor: Taylor, Henry [Artist]; Simpson, Bennett [Editor]; Coleman, Wanda [Writer of supplementary textual content]; Davis, Karon [Writer of supplementary textual content]; Gaines, Charles [Writer of supplementary textual content]
  • Corporation: Museum of Contemporary Art, Rita and Taft Schreiber Collection ; Whitney Museum of American Art
  • Published: Los Angeles: The Museum of Contemporary Art, 2022
    New York: DelMonico books D.A.P., 2022
  • Extent: 237 Seiten
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9781636810560
  • RVK notation: LI 99999 : Sonstige (CSN der Person)
  • Keywords: Taylor, Henry > Malerei > Zeichnung
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: This book is published on the occasion of the exhibition "Henry Taylor - B Side", organized by ... The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Exhibition itinerary: The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, November 6, 2022-April 30, 2023; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, October 4, 2023-January 28, 2024
    Includes bibliographical references
  • Description: Conversation with Henry Taylor / Hamza Walker -- Henry Taylor: B Side / Bennett Simpson -- Henry Taylor's Radical Aesthetics / Charles Gaines -- Exempt from Oblivion / Frances Stark -- Oh Henry! / Karon Davis -- She's Thinking about Romance / Harmony Holiday -- The Ancient Rain / Bob Kaufman -- Yr-neh / Walter Price -- L.A. Love Cry / Wanda Coleman.

    "Surveying 30 years of Henry Taylor's work in painting, sculpture and installation, this comprehensive monograph celebrates a Los Angeles artist widely appreciated for his unique aesthetic, social vision and freewheeling experimentation. Taylor's portraits and allegorical tableaux-populated by friends, family members, strangers on the street, athletic stars and entertainers-display flashes of familiarity in their seemingly brash compositions, which nonetheless linger in the imagination with uncanny detail. In his paintings on cigarette packs, cereal boxes and other found supports, Taylor brings his primary medium into the realm of common culture. Similarly, the artist's installations often recode the forms and symbolisms of found materials (bleach bottles, push brooms) to play upon art historical tropes and modernism's appropriations of African or African American culture. Taken together, the various strands of Taylor's practice display a deep observation of Black life in America at the turn of the century, while also inviting a humanist fellowship that pushes outward from the particular"--

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  • Status: Loanable