Jimmie Durham
Jimmie Durham
1995
Jimmie Durham is an internationally acclaimed artist, writer, and poet of Cherokee descent. His intricate sculptures and installations mimic the attributes of human beings and animals, and the ways they make or are made into history. Durham collages discarded objects and fragments of organic matter, transforming them with dazzling colour into startling, anthropomorphic configurations. His sculptures, wall-based collages, and ersatz ethnographic displays deliver ironic assaults on the colonizing procedures of Western culture. An activist in the American Indian movement during the 1970s, he has also published poetry, fiction, and critical theory. Featured at Documenta IX (1992), his work has also been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Ghent and Brussels museums of art and the ICA, London. Survey by British film and art critic Laura Mulvey, author of 'Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema' and other influential essays, explores themes of history and language, space and time in Durham's work. Belgian curator Dirk Snauwaert talks with the artist about his multi-faceted practice. Mark Alice Durant, American performance artist and writer, analyses Durham's diary of Shakespeare's Caliban. Durham has selected texts by Italo Calvino about the loss of speech and the poetry of the invisible. The Artist's Writings include essays, poems, and a screenplay.
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