Dolls and Masks

Ralph Eugene Meatyard

BOO 3160 U
€100,00
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CONDITION & NOTES
Very Good / Dust jacket has minor shelf wear. Interior has mild edge discolouration.

TYPE PUBLICATION YEAR
Hardcover

2011

EDITION LANGUAGE
First

English

PUBLISHER DIMENSIONS
Radius Books 26 x 24 x 2 cm
CONDITION
Very Good / Dust jacket has minor shelf wear. Interior has mild edge discolouration.

TYPE
Hardcover

PUBLICATION YEAR
2011

EDITION
First

LANGUAGE
English

PUBLISHER
Radius Books

DIMENSIONS
26 x 24 x 2 cm

ABOUT

In 1950s America there were neither likely nor logical paths for a photographer. Family man, optician, photographer, and avid reader, Ralph Eugene Meatyard found himself in the midst of a cultural and philosophical movement in Lexington, Kentucky, which at that time included such figures as Thomas Merton, Wendell Berry, and Guy Davenport. Through the camera, Meatyard explored and created a fantasy world of dolls and masks, where his family members played the central roles on an ever-changing stage. 

 

His monograph, The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater, published posthumously in 1974, recorded his wife and family posed in various disquieting settings, wearing masks and holding dolls and evoking a penetrating emotional and psychological landscape. The book won his work critical acclaim and has been hugely influential in the intervening decades.

 

Published to coincide with an exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, this handsome book presents 55 mostly unseen works from the Meatyard Archive. Essays by writer and historian Eugenia Parry and curator Elizabeth Siegel greatly expand our understanding of Meatyard’s elusive and captivating genius and set the stage for a foray into this unknown work of one of the century’s most intriguing photographers.