Advanced Search
Louise Bourgeois’ parents operated a tapestry restoration workshop, and she was long interested in weaving as a symbol of femininity and creativity. Here, her bold red form, in high relief against a background of bright white paper, might resemble many things including an emphatic exclamation point or an abstract braid. To create this work, master printmaker, Isaias Remba, at the Mixografia Workshop in Los Angeles made molds from what Bourgeois called “drawings” made from wound cord. Remba then used the molds to cast shaped copper plates and ran the plates through a press at intense pressure with many layers of paper to create these embossed prints. The result blurs the boundaries between Bourgeois’ twodimensional prints and drawings and her sculpture.
Thumbnail-size images of copyrighted artworks are displayed under fair use, in accordance with guidelines recommended by the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for the Visual Arts, published by the College Art Association in February 2015.
Crochet V
1997
Medium/Technique
Mixografia print, printed in red with embossing
Dimensions
Framed: 92.4 × 77.8 × 4.4 cm (36 3/8 × 30 5/8 × 1 3/4 in.)
Overall: 86 × 71.1 cm (33 7/8 × 28 in.)
Overall: 86 × 71.1 cm (33 7/8 × 28 in.)
Credit Line
Lee M. Friedman Fund
Accession Number2001.185
CollectionsContemporary Art, Americas, Prints and Drawings
ClassificationsPrints
Louise Bourgeois’ parents operated a tapestry restoration workshop, and she was long interested in weaving as a symbol of femininity and creativity. Here, her bold red form, in high relief against a background of bright white paper, might resemble many things including an emphatic exclamation point or an abstract braid. To create this work, master printmaker, Isaias Remba, at the Mixografia Workshop in Los Angeles made molds from what Bourgeois called “drawings” made from wound cord. Remba then used the molds to cast shaped copper plates and ran the plates through a press at intense pressure with many layers of paper to create these embossed prints. The result blurs the boundaries between Bourgeois’ twodimensional prints and drawings and her sculpture.
DescriptionFrom the suite of five one-color Mixografia prints, Crochet I-V. Copper plate casting and proofing by Isaias Remba at Mixografia Workshop in Los Angeles.
InscriptionsIn graphite, l.l.: 23/30; l.r.: LB
ProvenanceMuseum purchase March 2001
Copyright© VAGA, New York, NY