{"data":{"id":"157","type":"artist","attributes":{"id":157,"topgoose_id":2907,"tms_id":157,"display_name":"Louise Bourgeois","sort_name":"Bourgeois Louise","display_date":"1911–2010","begin_date":"1911","end_date":"2010","biography":"\u003cp\u003eLouise Bourgeois produced an extensive body of sculpture, drawings, and prints over the course of a career that spanned seventy-five years. Although the early work \u003ca href=\"/collection/works/2527\"\u003e\u003cem\u003eQuarantania\u003c/em\u003e\u003c/a\u003e is semiabstract, the elongated pine slabs of which it is made evoke a huddle of human figures. Indeed, Bourgeois described them as effigies of the family members and friends she missed when she moved to the United States in 1938. If this sculpture was partly a means of working through homesickness and guilt, its suggestion of tribal totems and primitive rituals ties it to contemporaneous endeavors by expatriate Surrealists working in New York in the 1940s, a community in which Bourgeois took part. She turned away from Surrealism in the 1950s, however, and also rejected the wholesale abstraction of the New York School painters with whom she often exhibited. Instead, she spent the ensuing six decades honing a three-dimensional practice that utilized various materials (including stone, plaster, fabric, and latex) in a wide range of shapes and scales to plumb the connections between body, psyche, and subjectivity. By turns aggressive and violent, vulnerable and sensual, her biomorphic, erotic forms often seem to symbolize the realization of subconscious drives or the exorcizing of latent desires.\u003c/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eIf these are universal themes, other elements of Bourgeois’s art are deeply personal. The anthropomorphized arachnid pictured in \u003ca href=\"/collection/works/28011\"\u003e\u003cem\u003eSpider Woman\u003c/em\u003e\u003c/a\u003e is one of the artist’s iconic motifs and was for her a maternal emblem, at once protective and threatening. Bourgeois described her own mother, who helped run the family’s tapestry restoration business, as “neat, and as useful as a spider,” declaring, “I shall never tire of representing her.”\u003c/p\u003e","on_view":false,"artport":false,"biennial":true,"collection":true,"ulan_id":"500057350","wikidata_id":"Q159409","created_at":"2017-08-30T17:39:21.000-04:00","updated_at":"2026-03-31T07:01:42.902-04:00","links":{"artworks":"/api/artists/157/artworks","exhibitions":"/api/artists/157/exhibitions"}}}}