
Tracey Emin, I Think It Must Have Been Fear, 2000, Appliqué blanket, 232 x 200 cm 91¼ × 78¾ “

Tracey Emin, I Think It Must Have Been Fear, 2000, Appliqué blanket, 232 x 200 cm 91¼ × 78¾ “

Louise Bourgeois

“Untitled (Hair Collar),” 1993 by Ann Hamilton. Linen collar with hand-sewn horsehair in case

Judy Chicago, Maker: Candis Duncan Pomykala, Embroidery work sample, 1984, Silk, flax, and cotton embroidery over painting on canvas
Dimensions: Image (slightly irregular): 11 ¼ x 8 ¾ in. (28.6 x 22.2 cm); plexi box: 14 ¼ x 11 ¼ x 1 ¾ in. (36.2 x 28.6 x 4.4 cm)

Judy Chicago, detail of Tree of Life

Judy Chicago, Maker:LoBiando family, Needlepoint work sample, 1981, Wool needlepoint over painting on mesh, in acrylic box, :Approx. (slightly irregular): 9 ¾ x 7 5/8 in. (24.8 x 19.4 cm); acrylic box: 14 3/16 x 11 3/16 x 1 ¾ in. (36 x 28.4 x 4.4 cm)

Fashion show and happening held at Yayoi Kusama Studo’s Infinity Mirror Room in 1968

Tracey Emin

Louise Bourgeois: Me, Eugénie Grandet. : Courtesy Cheim & Read, Hauser and Wirth, and Karsten Greve Gallery
Doris Salcedo, A Flor de Piel (detail), 2011, Rose petals and thread, 1333.5 x 650 cm, D.Daskalopoulos Collection Installation view: Doris Salcedo, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, February 21–May 2
“To create A Flor de Piel, Doris Salcedo sutured together hundreds of rose petals into a delicate shroud that undulates softly on the floor. Suspended in a state of transformation, the petals linger between life and death and are so vulnerable that they tear if touched. For Salcedo, fragility becomes the essence of the work as she sought to create an “image that is immaterial.” The title is a Spanish idiomatic expression used to describe an overt display of emotions. While that meaning is lost when literally translated, the phrase a flor de piel links flowers and skin, suggesting a sensation so overwhelming that it is expressed physically through a coloring of the body’s surface.
Salcedo’s installations and sculptures often employ minimal forms that subtly evoke the fragility of human life. Viewed in light of the brutal civil war in Salcedo’s native Colombia, this aesthetic sensibility takes on specific political resonances. Salcedo conceived the work A Flor de Piel while she was researching the events surrounding a female nurse who was tortured to death in Colombia and whose dismembered body has never been found. The artist has described the work as a floral offering to this victim of torture, as well as all of those who have been affected by violence. “Suturing the petals is very important because it was a way to bring together all these parts,” Salcedo has said. “Violence destroys everything. Torture destroys bodies. The idea is to bring them together and unite them and recover the force that they had.”¹
Lauren Hinkson
1. Doris Salcedo and Tim Marlow, “Doris Salcedo on A Flor De Pieland Plegaria Muda,” White Cube, May 25, 2012, accessed June 6, 2013.

Mona Hatoum, Chain, 1999, Leather gloves, nylon thread, wood, steel, 100.30 x 25.40 cm, Private Collection

I Feel Your Heart Beat In My Throat, Peter Gallo