Figure/s : drawing after Bellmer.

Contributor(s): Publication details: London : Drawing Room, 2021.Description: PamphletSubject(s): Summary: Guide published on the occasion of the exhibition held at Drawing Room, London, 10 September - 31 October 2021. Raised by a fascist father in Nazi Germany, the Surrealist artist Hans Bellmer (1902-1975) dedicated his uvre to a perverse rewriting of the symbolic order. Famous for the two dolls he constructed in the mid-1930s, his transgressive ideas around the body as anagram were shared by his partner Unica Zürn. Both broke received codes of behaviour and the implicit rules of language, providing fertile ground for artists and other thinkers, including feminists, to similarly rewrite the body. This publication gathers responses to its themes: body as letter, word and sentence; perversion and enjoyment; technical and forensic drawing in pursuit of pleasure; the other than humanbecoming object, plant, animal. This book is a way to think through and with works of art and their histories, involving multiple textual forms, collage, and drawing, which take the radical and transgressive energy of Bellmer and Zürn in unexpected directions
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Pamphlet Pamphlet CGLAS Library Pamphlets - Ask at Library desk Green 741.926 MAC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Pamphlets are reference only - NOT FOR LOAN 12147

Guide published on the occasion of the exhibition held at Drawing Room, London, 10 September - 31 October 2021. Raised by a fascist father in Nazi Germany, the Surrealist artist Hans Bellmer (1902-1975) dedicated his uvre to a perverse rewriting of the symbolic order. Famous for the two dolls he constructed in the mid-1930s, his transgressive ideas around the body as anagram were shared by his partner Unica Zürn. Both broke received codes of behaviour and the implicit rules of language, providing fertile ground for artists and other thinkers, including feminists, to similarly rewrite the body. This publication gathers responses to its themes: body as letter, word and sentence; perversion and enjoyment; technical and forensic drawing in pursuit of pleasure; the other than humanbecoming object, plant, animal. This book is a way to think through and with works of art and their histories, involving multiple textual forms, collage, and drawing, which take the radical and transgressive energy of Bellmer and Zürn in unexpected directions