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Barbara Chase-Riboud

I am not sorry I love you
Price available upon request

2020
Silk on Arches paper

75 x 55 cm / 29 ½ x 21 ⅝ in
90.4 x 71 x 4.4 cm / 35 ⅝ x 28 x 1 ¾ in (framed)

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  • Navigate to: I am not sorry I love you
  • Navigate to: I am not sorry I love you
  • Navigate to: I am not sorry I love you
  • Navigate to: I am not sorry I love you
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In addition to the sculptures, six works on paper will be presented in the booth, all made in 2020. Using a technique she has used since the 1970s, Chase-Riboud creates different graphic formations pierced directly onto paper using silk thread, reminiscent of handwriting or hieroglyphics. A celebrated poet and writer, the artist approaches these works similarly to her automatic writings and poems, akin to a visual, surrealist train of thought, also reflected in the titles of the works, such as ‘One who has loved, remembers that he has loved...’ and ‘l fall away from distant stars.’ Speaking of handwriting in her work, the artist says ‘They are parts of drawings. I mean, they are handwriting and they are drawings done with fiber, but also as a kind of repetition of the kind of handwriting I used as embellishment for the charcoal drawings. The drawings and the poetry are one. They are almost inseparable. I never know where one begins and where one ends.’

About the artist

Over the course of her seven-decade career, Barbara Chase-Riboud has created a revolutionary body of work which is defined equally by its inventiveness, technical prowess and fearless engagement with transcultural histories. Born in Philadelphia PA in 1939, Chase-Riboud currently resides between Paris and Rome. At a young age, she began taking art classes at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial. After graduating high school, Chase-Riboud studied at Temple University’s Tyler School of Art, where she received training in painting, drawing and sculpture.

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Artwork images © Barbara Chase-Riboud. Photo: Alex Delfanne, Sarah Muehlbauer
Barbara Chase-Riboud portrait with Time Womb, 2022. Photo © Pulitzer Arts Foundation