Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of felt, suture thread, epoxy resin, pigment, varnish.

Throat

1995

Joan Livingstone (American, b. 1948)

United States

From the early years of her career, Livingstone has demonstrated a strong interest in the human body. She began making sculptural work in felt that consciously referred to the body in 1990. Felt seemed a perfect metaphor for skin, resembling hide while acting as a membrane. Initially abstract and sensual, by 1994 the bodily references were more overt and organ-like, with wrinkled areas, projecting tubes, and bloody coloring. Throat, Collar, and Vent, conceived as a set, are powerful works that present the viewer with an uncomfortable paradox: from a distance they represent something normally hidden and repugnant, while close up they are actually quite beautiful in color and surface treatment.

Felt, suture thread, epoxy resin, pigment, varnish

Textiles

Chicago Artists