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Lisa Phillips (1) (1954–)

Author of The American Century: Art and Culture, 1950-2000

For other authors named Lisa Phillips, see the disambiguation page.

26+ Works 638 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Lisa Phillips

Works by Lisa Phillips

Beat Culture and the New America 1950-1965 (1995) 90 copies, 1 review
Charles Ray (1998) — Author — 72 copies
Richard Prince (1992) 54 copies, 1 review
1997 Biennial Exhibition (1997) 50 copies
1987 Biennial Exhibition (1987) 28 copies
Frederick Kiesler (1989) 26 copies
Terry Winters (1991) 26 copies
40 years New (2017) 10 copies
Skin Fruit (2010) 10 copies

Associated Works

Paul McCarthy (2000) — Introduction — 48 copies
Cindy Sherman: Centerfolds (2004) — Introduction — 26 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1954
Gender
female

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
The photos in here are amazing! Some are classics that I've seen many times, some were new to me! I definitely wasn't as familiar with the artwork of the beats, I have had more exposure to their writings. But to me, the pictures are the star of this book!
The written pieces were just so-so. It felt a little bit too much like a textbook on the beat culture. Still, during this time of civil unrest and upheaval, the chapter “Black Beats and Black Issues” really resonated with me! I read show more through that one twice!

Kind of ironic, that to me, the written portion of this book is very clinical, almost sterile. The beats wrote in a bee-bop sort of fashion, sort of jazzy, semi-free associative, and kind of wild. The pieces in here are more of a scholarly type. Not beat-like at all.
But, the beats changed, didn't they. William Burroughs in a Nike ad. Republican Clint Eastwood directing a film about Charlie Parker. Things change, things don't always make sense. Maybe that's kinda 'beat' after all!
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Richard Prince emerged in the 1980s as one of America's new, highly innovative artists who worked with the margins of American subcultures and visual debris. Highly idiosyncratic subject matter - such as one-line jokes, cartoons, cowboys ("borrowed" from the Marlboro ads) and motorcycle gangs - are central to his work. In the late 1970s Prince was working for the cutting services of "Time Life" publications in New York, and had access to thousands of cut-up magazines of which only the show more advertisements remained intact. He began to re-photograph the advertisements and compose his own pictures from this highly familiar, "Pop" imagery - updating Pop Art's homage to consumerism and its icons in the 1960s. Recently Prince's work has taken an unexpected turn, and the artist has emerged as a consummate painter, producing some of the most unusual and admired works in the current painting scene. Prince is one of America's best-known artists internationally, and in 1992 was honoured with a one-person retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Other museums which have held solo shows of Prince's work include the Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Kunsthalle Dusseldorf; IVAM, Valencia; and the Haus der Kunst, Munich, among many others. show less
Includes a lengthy illustrated essay by Lisa Phillips, followed by a catalogue listing over 50 works by 22 sculptors. Includes lengthy biographical information on each sculptor. Lengthy selected bibliography. Published to accompany the exhibition held in NY: Whitney, Dec. 6, 1984 to Mar. 3, 1985.

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
26
Also by
4
Members
638
Popularity
#39,509
Rating
4.1
Reviews
4
ISBNs
351
Languages
4

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