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Darrel Ellis

Darrel Ellis
Library Shelf Location 18.ELLI
Publication Date 2021
Description

The first monograph on Darrel Ellis' expressive transformations of photographic memory.

Known for his experimental approach to painting and photography, New York–based mixed-media artist Darrel Ellis (1958–92) explored the psychic terrain between surface, memory and lyric self-representation. Working in part from his late father’s photographs, Ellis projected, deconstructed and reimaged his family history, creating uncanny portraits marked by voids and warps. His commitment to the self-portrait was no less inspired, particularly after his experiences of being photographed by Robert Mapplethorpe and Peter Hujar. Ellis was on the cusp of major recognition when his life was cut short by AIDS in 1992, at the age of 33.

This monograph provides the most comprehensive account of the artist to date, including 80 plates that chart his development from figurative painting to photographic experimentation and his later preoccupation with self-portraiture. A richly illustrated chronology, featuring never before seen excerpts from the artist’s journals, and an examination of Ellis’s unique photographic process provide new insights into Ellis’s life and artwork.

ISBN 9781173264156
Quantity 1
Pages 208
Editors Lara Mimosa Montes, Kyle Croft
Format Hardback
Publisher Visual Aids
Category Artists' Monographs A-Z
Keywords photography, AIDS, Black Artists, Self-portrait photographs, Family Photographs, Family history

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