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Image: 7 3/16 x 11 1/2 in (18.3 x 29.2 cm) Published by Peter Blum Edition, New York Printed by Harlan & Weaver, New York. // A delicate etched interior reveals a female figure amid domestic architecture — doorways, walls, and furniture rendered in fine, spare lines that oscillate between blueprint and dream. Autobiographical Series 13 belongs to Bourgeois's celebrated 1994 suite of etchings, each drawing from memory, the body, and the charged spaces of her childhood. The restrained draftsmanship belies the psychological intensity beneath: themes of confinement, longing, and resilience emerge with quiet force. Published by Peter Blum Edition and printed by Harlan & Weaver, this is a blue-chip work held in major museum collections worldwide.
Autobiographical Series 13, 1994
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39 x 53 cm
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Image: 7 3/16 x 11 1/2 in (18.3 x 29.2 cm) Published by Peter Blum Edition, New York Printed by Harlan & Weaver, New York. // A delicate etched interior reveals a female figure amid domestic architecture — doorways, walls, and furniture rendered in fine, spare lines that oscillate between blueprint and dream. Autobiographical Series 13 belongs to Bourgeois's celebrated 1994 suite of etchings, each drawing from memory, the body, and the charged spaces of her childhood. The restrained draftsmanship belies the psychological intensity beneath: themes of confinement, longing, and resilience emerge with quiet force. Published by Peter Blum Edition and printed by Harlan & Weaver, this is a blue-chip work held in major museum collections worldwide.
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Louise Bourgeois
The Songs Of The Blacks And The Blues, 1999
Limited Edition Print
Mixed Media
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Louise Bourgeois
Untitled (Undulating Ribbon), 1997
Drawing / Watercolor
Mixed Media
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What is Surrealism?
Surrealism began in the 1920s as an art and literary movement with the goal of revealing the unconscious mind and unleashing the imagination by exploring unusual and dream-like imagery. Influenced by Sigmund Freud’s theories of psychoanalysis, Surrealist artists and writers sought to bring the unconscious into rational life, blurring the lines between reality and dreams. The movement aimed to challenge conventional perceptions and express the irrational aspects of the human experience.
