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Rose Finn-Kelcey

Rose Finn-Kelcey
Library Shelf Location 18.FINN
Publication Date 2013
Description

Spanning performance, sculpture and installation, Rose Finn-Kelcey’s innovative art is characterised by its diversity in approach.

From the 1970s Rose Finn-Kelcey became a central figure in the emerging communities of Performance and Feminist art in the UK. The complex thinking embodied in her work has touched on such themes as power and the dilemmas of mastery; the myth of the artist; the gaining of a voice; the deceptions of value; the nature of collaboration; the surrogate performer; spirituality; longing and death.

The performance Glory (1983) was a compelling reaction to the Falklands War, while Bureau de Change (1987) was a response to the auction of Van Gogh’s Sunflowers – a striking visual polemic against dehumanised values as well as a complex meditation on art and creativity.

This book is the first comprehensive monograph on the artist. It documents more than four decades of her art and includes over 150 illustrations, as well as important essays by Guy Brett, Sarah Kent and Michael Stanley.

ISBN 9781905464685
Quantity 1
Pages 218
Authors Guy Brett, Sarah Kent, Michael Stanley
Format Hardback
Publisher Ridinghouse, London
Related Artist Rose Finn-Kelcey
Categories Live Art/Performance, Sculpture, Installation
Keywords Political art, Activism, Feminism
Language English

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