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Beau Dick: Devoured by Consumerism

Beau Dick: Devoured by Consumerism - Hardcover

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Availability:In StockContributor:Latiesha Fazakas, John Cussans, Cole SpeckPublish date:4/9/2019Pages:80
Language:EnglishPublisher:Figure 1 PublishingISBN-13:9781773270869ISBN-10:1773270869UPC:9781773270869Book Category:ArtBook Subcategory:Indigenous, Individual Artists, Collections, Catalogs, ExhibitionsBook Topic:MonographsSize:9.20 x 8.20 x 0.60 inchesWeight:1.1508Product ID:SC3GVXFDQV
Language:EnglishPublisher:Figure 1 PublishingISBN-13:9781773270869ISBN-10:1773270869UPC:9781773270869Book Category:ArtBook Subcategory:Indigenous, Individual Artists, Collections, Catalogs, ExhibitionsBook Topic:MonographsSize:9.20 x 8.20 x 0.60 inchesWeight:1.1508Product ID:SC3GVXFDQV
Fazakas, Latiesha: - LaTiesha Fazakas is a curator and dealer who has specialized in Northwest Coast Indigenous Art for nearly two decades. In 2013 she established Fazakas Gallery, an inclusive space that takes a curatorial approach to exploring cross-cultural works. In 2017, she was the Beau Dick curatorial coordinator for his participation in documenta 14 in Athens and Kassel. LaTiesha Fazakas was a writer, director and producer of the documentary film Maker of Monsters: The Extraordinary Life of Beau Dick (2017). She holds a bachelor's degree in art history from the University of British Columbia.Cussans, John: - John Cussans is an artist and writer whose work draws on the cultural legacies of Surrealism and avant-garde ethnography within contemporary art and popular culture. His book Undead Uprising: Haiti, Horror and the Zombie Complex (MIT / Strange Attractor Press, 2017) explores the uses of Haiti as a locus for Euro-American fears about African culture, spirituality and revolutionary excess in the Americas, and their sublimation into popular horror tropes. Since 2016 he has been working on an inter-disciplinary, artistic research project called The Skullcracker Suite--inspired by Hox'hok, the giant cannibal crane of Kwakwaka'wakw Oral Traditions--which investigates processes of cultural decolonization in British Columbia since the 1970s.Hunt, Alan: - Alan Hunt is a carver and hereditary chief of Kwakwaka'wakw and Tlingit ancestry, and lives in Alert Bay, B.C. He dedicates himself to the cultural practices of his people as a singer in ceremonies and as an active participant in the Potlatch. Hunt began carving in 2011 and began an apprenticeship under Beau Dick in 2013. While Dick was the artist-in-residence at UBC's Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Hunt worked closely with Dick in his studio and assisted in the creation of the works for documenta 14.
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Publisher: Figure 1 Publishing

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