How can a work of art be at once completely an object and not merely an object? Somers shows, thrillingly, how works by Louise Bourgeois evoke the transitional objects that mediate our earliest encounters with the world. <i>Transformative Objects</i> is at once an incisive study of a major artist, a lucid introduction to object relations theory, and a richly immersive experience in its own right.

Douglas Mao, Russ Family Professor in the Humanities and Film and Media Program Chair, Johns Hopkins University, USA

Louise Bourgeois once said in an interview: ‘I carry my psychoanalysis within the work’. In this intricate and lively study, Lynn Somers stages encounters with Bourgeois’s images and objects that reveal how this psychoanalysis emerges from and embraces that work.

Naomi Segal, Professor Emerita, Institute of Languages, Cultures & Societies, University of London, UK

This book considers the sculpture of Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010) in light of psychoanalyst D. W. Winnicott’s (1896-1971) radical ideas regarding transitional objects, potential space, and play, offering a model for exploring the complex and psychologically evocative work Bourgeois produced from 1947 to 2000.
Critical concepts from British object relational theories – destruction, reparation, integration, relationality and play – drawn from the writings of Winnicott, Melanie Klein, Marion Milner, and Christopher Bollas, among others, bear upon the decades-long study of psychoanalysis Bourgeois brought to her sculptural production that was symbolic, metaphorical, and most importantly, useful.

The book demonstrates how Bourgeois’s transformative sculptural objects and environments are invested in object relations, both psychical and tangible, and explores Bourgeois’s contention that the observer physically engage with the intricate sculptural objects and architectural spaces she produced. Each chapter focuses on a key body of work – Femme Maison, Personages, Lairs, Janus, and Cells – examining how these imaginative and playful objects are staged as embodied encounters in space and time to invoke the mutuality, reciprocity, and ambivalence of our object relationships.

Weaving a tapestry of aesthetic, cultural, and psychological encounters, Transformative Objects and the Aesthetics of Play addresses critical relationships among Bourgeois’s work and that of other artists from Pieter Brueghel to Eva Hesse. It brings together practical, archival, and theoretical material, offering close examinations of historically situated objects and analyses of their complex affects and spatiality. Gathering critical perspectives from psychoanalysis, cultural analysis, feminist, queer, literary and affect studies, the book extends its specific art historical scope to investigate the crucial roles that art and cultural experience assume in everyday life.

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Introduction
0.1 Art and the Aesthetics of Play
0.2 Art and Transitional Objects

1: Femme Maison and the Materiality of Home (1945–1949)
1.1 Affects of Home Space
1.2 Metaphors of Body and Home
1.3 Home and the Material Unconscious
1.4 Environments of Estrangement
1.5 Unbearable Objects

2: Personages: Making, Transition, and Use (1947–1955)
2.1 Paradoxical Objects
2.2 Matter, Making, and Materiality
2.3 Sculpture Embodied
2.4 Sculpture as Theoretical Object
2.5 Objects for Losing One’s Balance

3: Unruly Objects (1960–1968)
3.1 Pliable Stuff
3.2 Bound and Unbound
3.3 How to Undo an Object, or the Aesthetics of Undoing
3.4 How to Disturb the Order of Things
3.5 How to Use a Sculptural Object

4: Janus: Mothers, Ambivalence, and Play (1968–1989)
4.1 The Beginning(and End)of Softness
4.2 Paradoxes of Madness and Reason
4.3 War in the Nursery
4.4 Ruthless Love
4.5 Objects of Play and Imagination
4.6 Not Less than Everything

5: Cells: Evocative Object Worlds (1990–2000)
5.1 Containers and Containing Spaces
5.2 Cells as Bodily Spaces
5.3 Hidden Worlds
5.4 Collections, or Places, for Getting Lost
5.5 The Value of Nonsense

Conclusion
Index

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Presents the first historiographic treatment of Louise Bourgeois’s sculpture and its dynamic material engagement in space as viewed through the writings of D. W. Winnicott, among the foremost psychoanalysts of British object relations theory.
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Shifts away from the conventional autobiographical approach to Bourgeois’s work and provides a new framework for considering the sculptures as a series of evocative and ambivalent encounters within an intersubjective field—an 'aesthetics of play'
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We stand at several crossroads at the moment in relation to the visual arts and cultures, historical and contemporary, and to theories and methods of analysis. The series New Encounters: Arts, Cultures, Concepts, edited by Griselda Pollock, confronts de rigueur cultural research with critical and crucial questions regarding its relevance in the contemporary world, such as how we think about visual art, the status of art history in the institution, and whether visual culture is taking its place. Working with transdisciplinary research, the series opens up new fields of collaboration in the visual cultures through encounters between ways of thinking, doing and making in the arts and humanities, connecting praxis and theory in new and innovative ways. Exploring art, history, culture, film and photography, the series seeks new knowledge by facilitating encounters between and across these different ways of doing, making and thinking about visual culture, and its place in contemporary life.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350378865
Publisert
2025-01-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Vekt
900 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Dybde
32 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
328

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Lynn M. Somers is an Independent Scholar and Adjunct Assistant Professor of art history at Drew University, USA.