Museum Folkwang, Essen
Nancy Spero (1926–2009) is one of the most significant figures in post-war American art. She engages in a complex way with existential aspects of what it means to be human. War and violence play a role in her work, as do injustices in gender relations. Female figures are her most important expressive means, with Spero taking up traditional image types and re-combining them. The exterior form of many of her works is also unusual. Spero makes use of long strips of paper which she paints, collages, and prints with self-made figurative stamps. Ten years after her death, Museum Folkwang is presenting a large-scale survey exhibition dedicated to this fascinating artist, with around 80 works, including works on paper, paintings, and installations.
Image: Nancy Spero, To Soar, 1997
© The Nancy Spero and Leon Glolub Foundation for the Arts, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019