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Overview
Praised by critics for her technical mastery and emotional range, Mary Frank creates are of great power and beauty, continually exploring and developing within a series of broad themes new composition, new mediums, new sensations.141 illustrations, 45 in full color, 144 pages, 11 x 10"
Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
Mary Frank's ceramic sculptures and paintings on glass and metal combine myths, omens, lion-women, glimpses of dreams. Rather than illustrating myths literally, the artist often makes figures that embody the myth-making urge. A terra-cotta Persephone swells with plenitude, but her body is a fragile shell, one concave arm flung back as if inviting embrace. Frank's ceramics, intentionally fragmented, resemble objects found on an archeological dig, yet they are distinctly modern. Herrera, biographer of Frida Kahlo, illuminates the sources of Frank's creativity in this beautifully illustrated biographical-critical monograph. Monoprints of lovers, dinosaur skeletons and male heads extend the artist's imaginative realm. Also here are her ``shadow papers,'' constructions with light-filled openings along the paper's cut edges, where actual shadows give a semblance of substance by mimicking plastic modeling. (Nov.)Book Details
Published
October 1, 1990
Publisher
Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
Pages
144
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780810933019