Helen Chadwick

Life Pleasures

$59.99

This book is not yet published, but will be available from May 2025.

ISBN: 9780500028889 Category:

Laura Smith

Description

The first ever critical biography of Helen Chadwick, who died tragically young but is now revered as a pioneering feminist artist.

Helen Chadwick (1953-1996) embraced the sensuous aspects of the natural world, breaking taboos of the ‘traditional’ or ‘beautiful’. Her sculpture, performance and photography is radical, provocative and often steeped in humour, and employs unusual, sometimes grotesque materials – bodily fluids, meat, flowers, chocolate and compost among them. She quickly became a leading figure amongst Britain’s post-war avant-garde, becoming one of the first women to be nominated for the Turner Prize.

A dedicated teacher, she mentored the majority of the Young British Artists and is now known as the ‘mother of the YBAs’. She was also involved in the artistic community at Beck Road, Hackney, whose residents included Maureen Paley, Richard Deacon and Genesis P-Orridge.

Although she was widely exhibited during her lifetime, attention to Chadwick’s work declined following her unexpected death in 1996, and it is only relatively recently that the significance of her work has been acknowledged afresh. Coinciding with a major touring retrospective, this publication spans the breadth of her practice, from her renowned MA degree show In the Kitchen (1977) through to her seminal Piss Flowers (1991-2). Merging art and life, with a focus on Chadwick’s interdisciplinary interests and engagement with education, music and politics, as well as an in-depth study of her art and ideas, the book is a fitting tribute to her vital impact on social and cultural history.

Additional information

Weight 300 g
Dimensions 16.5 x 24 cm
Publisher name Thames and Hudson Ltd
Publication date 15 May 2025
Number of pages 272
Format Hardback
Contributors Text by Maria Christoforidou, Philomena Epps, and Katrin Bucher Trantow, Foreword by Marina Warner
Dimensions 16.5 x 24 cm
Weight 300 g
Laura Smith is the Director of Collection and Exhibitions at The Hepworth Wakefield. She was previously curator at Whitechapel Gallery, London. She writes extensively on modern and contemporary art, recently contributing to the publications Revisiting Modern British Art and Virginia Woolf Reader, as well as many artists' monographs. Marina Warner is an English historian, mythographer, art critic, novelist and short story writer. Maria Christoforidou is an artist, writer and researcher. Philomena Epps is a writer, art critic and researcher. Katrin Bucher Trantow is the chief curator of the Kunsthaus Graz.