Now, Now, Louison

(Author) (Translator)
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Product Details
Price
$13.95  $12.97
Publisher
New Directions Publishing Corporation
Publish Date
Pages
112
Dimensions
4.5 X 7.2 X 0.3 inches | 0.2 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780811228527
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
JEAN FRÉMON is a renowned French gallerist and writer and has written art-historical works on artists including Robert Ryman, Antoni Tapies, and Robert Walser. He worked with Louise Bourgeois on her first European exhibition in 1985 at the Galerie Lelong, and on the last exhibition she organized herself, at the Maison de Balzac.
A Guggenheim fellow and professor at Brown University, COLE SWENSEN is the author of more than ten poetry collections and many translations of works from the French.
Reviews
Jean Frémon is a wholly singular artist, a writer who lives in the radiant zone where poetry, philosophy, and storytelling meet.--Paul Auster
Poet and curator Frémon gives voice to one of the outstanding artists of the 20th century, Louise Bourgeois, in a written portrait that is as tender as it is catty and cantankerous. Strands of memory unfurl--from Bourgeois' childhood in France to her self-imposed exile in the US--alongside her thoughts on beauty and the purpose of art.-- "Financial Times" (10/5/2018 12:00:00 AM)
With Now, Now, Louison, Jean Frémon delivers a special pleasure -- he invites us into Louise Bourgeois' head as she creates. In so doing, Frémon opens up our understanding of both the artist and her art.-- "NPR"
The first to commission Bourgeois' work, for a European exhibition in 1985, writer and gallerist Jean Frémon meditates on the spirit of the iconoclastic artist, best known for her oversized sculptures of spiders, rather than presenting a straight biography.-- "The A.V. Club" (3/4/2019 12:00:00 AM)
A cat's cradle woven from shreds of [Louise Bourgeois's] biography, it nonetheless can snare the heart.--John Domini "The Washington Post" (4/4/2019 12:00:00 AM)
Taking as its lead both Bourgeois's voice and creative practice, this is a book that eschews excessive biographical detail to convey something closer to life, 'a kind of portrait' captured through the combined artistry of writer and translator.--Brigette Manion "Asymptote Journal" (10/5/2018 12:00:00 AM)
Frémon's style is poetic and often poignant. There's a rhythm and internal logic to the flow of the book that's all the more impressive because of its purposeful fragmentation. The text loops back on certain subjects and motifs, the way humans do in their minds. The most important of these, unsurprisingly, is art. Frémon clearly understands how much creating art informed Bourgeois's life, and his writing about her work is often his most insightful.-- "The Nation" (5/15/2019 12:00:00 AM)
The life of Louise Bourgeois is rendered in ellipses, quick brush strokes, and a mix of associations of ideas and of sensations waltzing with chronology. A highly original, sensitive text.-- "Libération"