Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
As New. Size: 4to 11"-13" tall; Sterling condition hardcover copy, bound in glossy pictorial covers, with unbruised tips, tight binding, and clean internals, showing only very slight shelf-and edge-wear; not ex-library, with neither underlining nor highlighting anywhere. Acknowledgments by Paul Ha and Susan E. Cahan, a Sponsor's Statement, Susan E. Cahan has contributed the title essay, "I Remember Heaven: Jim Hodges and Andy Warhol, " then Jose Esteban Munoz has enned "Just Like Heaven: queer utpian art and the aesthetic dimension, " followed by Selected Works, and then another essay by Cahan, "Iconographies of Mourning: Jim Hodges and Andy Warhol. Complete with a list of exhibitons, lenders to the exhibition, and a full chronology and index and bibliography. Member, I.O.B.A., C.B.A., and adherent to the highest ethical standards. Additional postage may be required for oversize or especially heavy volumes, and for sets.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
VG+ White patterned boards, 112pp, numerous color and BW plates. I Remember Heaven explores shared affinities in the work of the Pop art superstar Andy Warhol, and contemporary artist Jim Hodges. This cross-generational study looks at both artists' work within a continuum of art production that finds history in everyday artifacts and uses aesthetic representation as a means to understand visibility and invisibility, sexuality, selfhood, love and death. Essayist Jose Esteban Munoz discusses the artists' work in relation to queer aesthetics before and after Stonewall. Susan E. Cahan examines the personal and social aspects of collective grief, a subject which preoccupied both artists. I Remember Heaven captures a sense of the America of the 60s as not so different from today: Once again, the American public is fiercely divided over social issues; once again, an unpopular war enters American homes via television; and once again, American culture is experiencing an explosion of information--this time spawned by the Internet.