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Kirjailija

Reba Maybury

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 2 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2018-2025, suosituimpien joukossa Pervert or Detective?. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

2 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2018-2025.

Pervert or Detective?

Pervert or Detective?

Reba Maybury; Lucy McKenzie

No Place Press
2025
sidottu
A provocative conversation on the erotic, appropriation, power, and sex. In Pervert or Detective?, artists Reba Maybury and Lucy McKenzie dissect power, desire, and subversion in a provocative conversation. Maybury, who integrates her work as a political dominatrix into her artistic practice, manipulates dynamics of control, compelling her male submissives to create art under her direction, only to claim it as her own. Through confession and humiliation, she dismantles notions of authorship, masculinity, and labor. McKenzie, known for her intricate trompe l'oeil paintings and conceptual installations, similarly blurs boundaries--between art and commerce, and authenticity and illusion. Her work challenges power structures and exposes the unstable nature of representation. Maybury and McKenzie, through an expansive discussion with French art critic Marie Canet, interrogate the logic of seduction and domination, pushing against rigid binaries to probe the material erotic, appropriation, and transformation. With an introduction by curators Fredi Fischli and Niels Olsen, an afterword by writer Susan Finlay, and extensive reading and viewing lists, Pervert or Detective? offers a compelling exchange between artists committed to unsettling the familiar and redefining artistic agency.
Cavegirl Monologue

Cavegirl Monologue

Heather Benjamin; Reba Maybury

Sacred Bones
2018
pokkari
The subjects of her recent art are a logical continuation of the larger narrative of Benjamin's body of work: She works to excavate the female human experience as she knows it. Benjamin muses on intimacy, sexuality, self-perception, body dysmorphia, and trauma through her avatars. Her work is diaristic, approaching her subjects through the lens of her own personal experience; each piece can easily feel like a self-portrait. Her women are simultaneously self-assured and crumbled, standing defiantly on their own two hairy legs, yet seeking the shoulder of an empathetic viewer to cry on. Benjamin uses her art to sort through her own trauma and self-analysis, and seeks to give faces, bodies, and narratives to the different facets of her own womanhood.