With a foreword by Dr Eva-Maria Fahrner-Tutsek, an essay by Dr Jana Johanna Haeckel, a text by journalist and writer Minna Salami and a conversation between the artist Paul Mpagi Sepuya and the curator.
ISBN 978-3-95476-688-8
Ed. Alexander Tutsek-Stiftung and Jana Johanna Haeckel, Munich 2025
DISTANZ-Verlag
Englisch/Deutsch, 160 pages, ca. 100 color images
Hardcover, 21 × 28 cm
Design Bureau Wolewinski
What ideas and prejudices shape our understanding of love and intimacy? Which images are missing from collective memory, especially with regard to empathetic forms of togetherness? In reference to a poem of the Afro-American writer Audre Lorde, Love, Maybe. Intimacy and Desire in Contemporary Art is dedicated to the challenges and possibilities of picturing love in contemporary art. This richly illustrated publication presents artistic works and texts that address questions of gender roles, queerness, and parenthood. Rather than a feeling, love is conceived as an active practice that initiates a unifying form of resistance against normative categories.
Alexander Tutsek-Stiftung
Love, Maybe – Intimacy and Desire in Contemporary Art
34,00 EUR
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With a foreword by Dr Eva-Maria Fahrner-Tutsek, an essay by Dr Jana Johanna Haeckel, a text by journalist and writer Minna Salami and a conversation between the artist Paul Mpagi Sepuya and the curator.
ISBN 978-3-95476-688-8
Ed. Alexander Tutsek-Stiftung and Jana Johanna Haeckel, Munich 2025
DISTANZ-Verlag
Englisch/Deutsch, 160 pages, ca. 100 color images
Hardcover, 21 × 28 cm
Design Bureau Wolewinski
What ideas and prejudices shape our understanding of love and intimacy? Which images are missing from collective memory, especially with regard to empathetic forms of togetherness? In reference to a poem of the Afro-American writer Audre Lorde, Love, Maybe. Intimacy and Desire in Contemporary Art is dedicated to the challenges and possibilities of picturing love in contemporary art. This richly illustrated publication presents artistic works and texts that address questions of gender roles, queerness, and parenthood. Rather than a feeling, love is conceived as an active practice that initiates a unifying form of resistance against normative categories.