Rachel Rosenthal

Rachel Rosenthal
1997


book cover
In Rachel Rosenthal, editor Moira Roth brings together a powerful portrait of the woman the Village Voice calls "one of America's most intelligent, politically committed, and challenging performance artists." Featuring critical commentary, interviews, and photographs of Rosenthal's performances and collecting for the first time a selection of her writings (including the script of Rachel's Brain), the book captures the voice of a unique American artist. Inspired by theatrical writings of Antonin Artaud, Rosenthal's performance art blends music, words, images, and dance into ferociously moving works—a theatre of cruelty tempered by love, fiercely intense yet unsentimentally hopeful. With her shaved head, elegant stature, and distinctive style, she has become an icon of the American avant garde—archetypal prophet, Artaudian snake charmer, and vengeful seer who chides humanity for its crimes against the earth and itself.

Identifier

L0038

Call Number

NX512.R68 R3 1997

Extent

ix, 223 pages : illustrations ; softcover 24 cm

Language

English

ISBN

0801856299

Place of Publication

Baltimore, MD

Publication Type

Print
Copyright 1997 The Johns Hopkins University Press.