Mona Hatoum /
By: Hatoum, Mona [artist.]
.
Contributor(s): Brett, Guy [author.] | Archer, Michael [author.]
| Zegher, M. Catherine de [author.] | Spector, Nancy [author.].
Series: Contemporary artists: Publisher: London : Phaidon Press Ltd., 2016Edition: 2nd edition, revised and expanded.Description: 238 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour) ; 30 cm.Content type: text | text | still image Media type: unmediated | unmediated Carrier type: volume | volumeISBN: 9780714870441; 9780714870441:; 0714870447.Subject(s): Hatoum, Mona, 1952- -- Criticism and interpretation | Hatoum, Mona, 1952- | Hatoum, Mona, 1952- -- Interviews | Performance art -- England | Installations (Art) -- England | Women artists![](/opac-tmpl/bootstrap/images/filefind.png)
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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ATU Sligo Yeats Library Main Lending Collection | 709.2 HAT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0063304 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-236).
Interview. Michael Archer in conversation with Mona Hartoum -- Survey : itinerary / Guy Brett -- Focus : recollection / Catherine de Zegher -- Artist's choice : for a discovery of a zone of images, 1957 / Piero Manzoni ; Reflections on exile, 1984 / Edward Said -- Artist's writings : Proposal for 'New Contemporaries', Waterworks, 1981 ; Slade School of Art : Waterworks, 1981 ; Look no body!, 1981 ; Do-it, home version, 1996 ; Under siege, 1983 ; Interview with Sara Diamond, 1987 ; Interview with Claudia Spinelli, 1996 ; Interview with Janine Antoni, 19998 ; Interview with Jo Glencross, 1999 ; Interview with Chiara Bertola, 2014 / [Mona Hartoum] -- Dichotomies of belonging / Nancy Spector -- Chronology.
Born in Lebanon, Palestinian artist Mona Hatoum was exiled to London, where she has lived and worked since the mid-1970s. Through performance, video, sculpture, and installation, she creates architectonic spaces that relate to the body, language, and the condition of exile as well as transforming everyday, domestic objects into things foreign, threatening, and dangerous. Often exquisitely beautiful, Hatoum's works combine states of emotion and longing with the formal simplicity of Minimalism, creating powerful evocations of displacement, denial, and otherness.