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WEIGHING THE WORK OF LOVE: ON KATE DAVIS’S RE-VISIONED ICONOCLASM

Authors :
Dominic Paterson
Source :
Art is on, Iss 5, Pp 143-158 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
ARTIS- Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa, 2018.

Abstract

This essay offers a close reading of recent work by Glasgow-based artist Kate Davis to argue that her practice engages iconoclasm in ways importantly modified by her feminist commitments. Often Davis’s source material has significant historical, political or art historical import, as in her works dealing with the Suffragist attack on Velásquez’s Rokeby Venus in 1914. What is at stake in her ‘re-visioning’ of such moments, which often involves labour-intensive drawing as a key method, is a formal commitment to a kind of delicate or caring vandalism, often pursued through labour-intensive drawing (iconoclasm as a means of making images) and a specifically feminist contention with existing hierarchies of value and systems of representation (iconoclasm as contestation). To reckon with these stakes, Jean-Luc Nancy’s account of ‘the pleasure in drawing’ and the feminist concept of the ‘work of love’ are brought into relation with Davis’s work.

Details

Language :
English, Portuguese
ISSN :
21837082
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Art is on
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.90dd912b836e42258f75295d05af691b
Document Type :
article