Karla Black

It's Proof That Counts, JRP|Ringier, 2010
2010
Hardcover

Publisher: JRP|Ringier in collaboration with Kunstverein Hamburg, Modern Art Oxford, and Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh.

ISBN: 978-3-03764-084-5

Dimensions: 30.5 x 21.6 cm

Pages: 192

This extensive monograph gives, for the first time, a detailed insight into the work of Scottish artist Karla Black (born 1972 in Alexandria, lives and works in Glasgow). Reflecting the ephemeral nature of her work, the monograph resembles an artist's sketchbook that is still in the process of being used. Plaster, chalk dust, and Vaseline, or substances such as face powder, lipstick, and nail varnish are often the raw materials. These delicate works—whether transparent cellophane arranged sculpturally to hang from the ceiling, or fragile works of gossamer-fine powder sprinkled onto the floor—present references to the Minimal and Conceptual art of the 1960s and 1970s. Karla Black extends the classical notion of sculpture through a process-oriented, performative handling of cultural connotations and untypical materials. Not only does she create an oppositional model to the brute effect of Minimal art, but through the use of unstable and simple substances her work ties into the history of antiform, as defined notably by Robert Morris in his use of felt, or Eva Hesse in her deployment of latex.