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Produced to celebrate an exhibition of Matisse's work that toured Australia in 1995 - The Chapel of the Rosary at Venice - Overview of Matisse's painting - Drawings at an exhibition - Matisse in North Africa - Matisse's sculpture - Matisse's prints and illustrated books.
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This publication celebrates an artist at the height of his international career. The highly anticipated exhibition 'Cai Guo-Qiang: Falling Back to Earth' will be accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue, tracing QAGOMA's unique history with this globally renowned artist, from his early-career works from 'The Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art' in 1996 and 1999 through to the presentation in 2013 of his major new works. Essays by Australian and international authors will explore the exhibition's interrelated themes of nature, spirituality and globalisation, and focus on Cai's new works, documented here for the first time. With writing also by Cai Guo-Qiang on his collaborations with children from around the world.
MATISSE: DRAWING LIFE, and the exhibition it accompanies, explores Matisse's works, on and with paper, made throughout his long career. Featuring more than 300 drawings, prints, illustrated books and selected paintings and paper cut-outs by one of the twentieth century's greatest artists, it traces an arc from the artist's studies in Paris at the turn of the twentieth century, through the intimacies of daily life in his studio sketched in pencil and pen, to the masterpieces made using line, light and colour in the decade before his death in 1954. This publication showcases the most comprehensive gathering of Matisse's graphic work from major international museums and private collections ever presented in an exhibition with new writing by Isabelle Monod-Fontaine, Celine Chicha-Castex and Emilie Ovaere-Corthay.
Here you will find over 400 Polaroids by Andy Warhol of street hustlers and call boys engaging in sexual acts and posing as drag queens. The pictures inspired paintings known as the Torso Series but, as Bob Colacello recounts, were known around the office as the Cocks, Cunts, and Assholes Series.