“[Bryan-Wilson] shows why Nevelson’s sculpture matters today, and that art history can be a tool for responding to what is happening now.”—Sophie Oliver, <i>Times Literary Supplement</i><br /><br />“Boldly conceived, Julia Bryan-Wilson’s far-reaching study gives us a multidirectional understanding of Louise Nevelson’s intersectional abstraction that renders the artist strikingly contemporary.”—Kobena Mercer, author of <i>Travel & See: Black Diaspora Art Practices since the 1980s</i><br /><br />“Julia Bryan-Wilson’s <i>Louise Nevelson</i> is exceptional in its innovative framing, physical structure, and above all, brilliantly original weaving of personal experience, material analysis, and art historical methodologies.”—Jo Applin, author of <i>Lee Lozano: Not Working</i><br /><br />“Bryan-Wilson brings world-class critical, feminist, and social-historical skills to bear on Nevelson’s sculpture and public persona. The result is that we see Nevelson’s radiant intelligence in a new light.”—Richard Meyer, author of <i>Master of the Two Left Feet: Morris Hirshfield Rediscovered</i><br /><br />“From the multicomponent design to the conceptual approaches therein, Bryan-Wilson has crafted an innovative and engaging look at Louise Nevelson. Further, she offers a queered, critical methodology that changes the game.”—Bridget R. Cooks, author of <i>Exhibiting Blackness: African Americans and the American Art Museum</i><br /><br />