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A mind weighted with unpublished matter / Rebecca Fortnum ; edited by Rebecca Fortnum and Andrew Hunt ; photography by Richard Elliott.

Contributor(s): Series: Slimvolume ; #14.Publisher: London : Slimvolume, 2020Description: 73 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour) ; 28 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781910516133
  • 1910516139
Subject(s): Summary: A Mind Weighted with Unpublished Matter marks a development in the history of portraiture, raising questions about the relationship between sitter and painter, issues of authority and control as well as social attitudes around gender. Working from photographs of nineteenth century sculptures of women, Fortnum's source material allows for continual extended returns to elusive objects, a type of close, careful looking that leads the artist towards the depiction of every surface detail. This is a rumination on how representation is mastered; on the 'accomplished', intrinsically feminine status of the copy of the work of art in comparison to its 'inventive', 'ingenious', 'original, wrought by male hands; a critique of a value-laden history that is inherently masculine, and copying as a submissive, secretive other.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Book Book CGLAS Library Monographs Room FOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 12130

Includes bibliographical references.

A Mind Weighted with Unpublished Matter marks a development in the history of portraiture, raising questions about the relationship between sitter and painter, issues of authority and control as well as social attitudes around gender. Working from photographs of nineteenth century sculptures of women, Fortnum's source material allows for continual extended returns to elusive objects, a type of close, careful looking that leads the artist towards the depiction of every surface detail. This is a rumination on how representation is mastered; on the 'accomplished', intrinsically feminine status of the copy of the work of art in comparison to its 'inventive', 'ingenious', 'original, wrought by male hands; a critique of a value-laden history that is inherently masculine, and copying as a submissive, secretive other.