museumtalks:

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Mona Hatoum – Pull, 1952

This was actually sort of a live performance. The hair that you can see was an extension that was connected to her hair, so she could feel when someone pulled it and then scare the person that was watching. So the tv screen gives live images. For her the most difficult part knowing where the person would be so she could look right at them.

Mona Hatoum, Slicer, 1999, Egg Slicer, stainless steel and marble.

“With this sculpture, Hatoum has turned an ordinary domestic object into something menacing by enlarging an egg slicer to measure four feet in length. The artist began to use kitchen utensils such as graters and colanders in her work during the 1990s, describing them as ‘exotic objects.’ They represented the traditional feminine domain of the kitchen, objects which traditionally kept the housewife tied to the home, yet greatly enlarged they assume a threatening aspect. ‘Slicer’ has been made on a human scale, with its slicing blades raised menacingly. This darkly humorous work is influenced by Surrealism – Magritte is one of Hatoum’s favourite artists and his paintings which distort scale are a predecessor of this work”

–National Galleries Scotland

vs.

Ann Hamilton, (privation and excesses • grinders), The Carol and Arthur Goldberg Collection1988/1991

“A component of the installation privation and excesses, 1989, was a pair of wall-mounted mechanized mortars and pestles, one of them grinding teeth, the other one grinding pennies. The dematerializing teeth were in contrast to the overriding element of that installation, a 45 x 32 foot field of 750,000 copper pennies-laid into a surface coating of honey on the building’s concrete floor. As Hamilton notes, “Where the installation juxtaposed the animal economy of honey to the human economy of money, these grinders similarly juxtapose the biologically produced and the human made.” For her earliest mechanized tables, as well as her most recent spinning speakers, Hamilton has tinkered with existing industrial equipment for sculptural and audio effect. The pulverizing sounds of these two grinders within the installation, as Hamilton notes, were ‘the background to the lathering movement and sloshing sound of hands in honey.’”Photo credit: Ben Blackwell
Text excerpted from Ann Hamilton: An Inventory of Objects. New York: Gregory R. Miller & Co., 2006. Joan Simon

Jenny Holzer, Truisms (Marquees), 1993, installation, NYC

Muriel Zeller, “Self, Time and External Circumstances”

Gwendolyn Brooks, “The Mother”

Mona HatoumMarrow , 1996, rubber, 128.3 x 58.4 x 50.8 cm. (50.5 x 23 x 20 in

Doris Salcedo, Untitled, 1987, Steel cot, steel shelving, rubber, 10 plastic dolls and pig intestine, 1870 x 2410 x 460 mm, 65, Tate

Tracey Emin, Terribly Wrong 1997, monoprint on paper, 58.2 x 81.1. Tate

Frida Kahlo, My Birth, Mi Nacimiento, 1932

Anne Sexton, “The Abortion”

Sylvia Plath, April 18th 

Tracey EminFeeling Pregnant (in 6 parts) , 2000, clothes, wood and text

1.  Louise BourgeoisTopiary: The art of Improving Nature (portfolio of 9) , 1998, etchings w/color aquatint

2. Oliver Gilbert

3. Mona HatoumUntitled (Crutches), 1991, rubbe, reach: 122 by 21cm.; 48 by 8 ¼ in.

4. Jana Sterbak, Monumental, 2002, wood, 2 parts, each 205 x 32 x 6 cm

Recollection 

Mona Hatoum

1995

Installation, variable dimensions.
Materials: hair balls, strands of hair hung from ceiling, wooden loom with woven hair, table

Collection: De Vleeshal Collection, Middelburg (The Netherlands) (Inv. no. VH0204).

Recollection consists of a table-shaped loom used to weave human hair; strewn on the ground around it we come across hundreds of little brown balls made out of hair – the artist’s own – and an invisible ‘wall’ of hairs strung up, in a precise grid, from ceiling to floor. A chilling mixture of bodily intimacy and abject domesticity, the work exemplifies Hatoum’s interest in topics related to imprisonment, incarceration and enslavement.