Catalogue de la documentation. La collection en ligne du Frac Bretagne. Fonds livres d'artiste du Frac Bretagne. Louise Lawler dans Videomuseum - Réseau des collections publiques d'art moderne et contemporain. Louise Lawler - Galerie Metro Pictures. Still Life (Candle) (traced), 2003/2013.
Adhesive wall material, dimensions variable. Pollock and Tureen (traced), 1984/2013. Adhesive wall material, dimensions variable. Installation view, "The Vanished Reality," 2016. Louise Lawler - AWARE. Louise Lawler - Centre Pompidou. Louise Lawler Retrospective - MoMA NY. Louise Lawler: Why pictures now - MoMA Live - vidéo. Louise Lawler - Tate Modern. Louise Lawler. The 1960s and 1970s witnessed a major shift in the conception of art – art became seenas context-bound.
While that had always been the case, artists and art historians alike preferred for a long time to speak only of the auratic, monolithic ‘work’. Proud and self-contained, the ‘work’ was thought to tower over the everyday like Isengard over Middle Earth. Autonomous art, autonomous arthistory – this was the dominant conception. Louise Lawler - Skarstedt Gallery.
Louise Lawler (Born 1947) Louise Lawler was born in 1947 in Bronxville, New York.
She graduated from Cornell University in 1969. Lawler developed her individual style during the early 1980s, a time of intense growth in the overall economy, particularly in the art market. Within this environment, material goods became equated with financial success and artworks continued to represent the possession of cultural capital. International Center of Photography. Louise Lawler was born in 1947 in Bronxville, New York, and holds an MFA from Cornell.
In many of her projects, Lawler photographs artists' works after they have left the studio, which allows her to comment on the way the art is lived with, exhibited, handled, stored, consigned, reproduced, repackaged, and/or ignored. For example, Lawler will photograph pieces hanging in private collectors' homes or in auction house showrooms waiting to be sold. She is most interested in the juxtaposition of the works with their settings more than the individual works themselves. Louise Lawler - Artsy.