Coverbild Boris Lurie. 100th Anniversary
An angled view of a collage-style book cover or poster on a white background. Large, bright pink, cut-out letters spell out WITH LIFE THE DEAD. The design, celebrating the Boris Lurie 100th Anniversary, features a photo of a woman in red heart-shaped sunglasses and a black-and-white portrait of a man in a hat.
An angled, overhead view of the hardcover book Boris Lurie: Life with the Dead on a white surface. The book cover has a collage design with a kraft paper background and features the title in large, bold, bright pink letters in a cutout style.
The back cover of a book titled Life with the Dead by Boris Lurie, shown against a plain white background. The book has a brown cardboard cover with the title spelled out in large, bold, hot pink letters that look like they are made from tape. Below the title is text about the artist's 100th anniversary and an exhibition at the 60th Venice Biennale. The bottom of the cover features a barcode, a signature, and several publisher logos.
An open book displays a two-page spread. The left page, numbered 18, shows a timeline of biographical information. The right page, numbered 19 and titled Boris Lurie - A Biography, features a color photograph of the artist Boris Lurie standing in his cluttered studio, circa 1990.
An open art book on a white surface, displaying a two-page spread of a colorful and chaotic collage by Boris Lurie. The 1963 NO!art piece, titled Big NO Painting, is a dense mix of vintage pin-up photos, advertisement clippings, text, and expressive paint strokes.
An overhead photo of an open book with bright magenta pages lying on a white surface. The book is open to pages 144 and 145, which feature German text about Gertrude Stein and a black-and-white photograph of a group of people at a gallery event.
A table of contents page with the word CONTENTS in a large, bold, pink font that looks like cut-out letters or tape. Below, the chapter titles and page numbers are listed in two columns in smaller pink text. Chapters include Boris Lurie – A Biography, The Delirium of Boris Lurie, and Boris Lurie and Holocaust Art. The page concludes with an index for German, Italian, Authors, Bibliography, and more.
A two-page spread from a book, pages 26 and 27, featuring an article by Jürgen Wilhelm titled Boris Lurie — No End to the Trauma. The title is printed in large, bold magenta text on the left page. The two columns of text are separated by a thick, vertical magenta stripe running down the center of the spread.
A page from an art book showing the 1973 collage Hard Writings: PLEASE by Boris Lurie. The word PLEASE is painted in large, bold, black letters on a distressed, light-colored background. A cutout image of a smiling woman with a pink bouffant hairstyle and a pearl necklace is placed behind the letters, her face looking out at the viewer.
A book spread displays two vintage exhibition posters from the Gertrude Stein Gallery. The poster on the left, from 1963, is pink with the large black text NO SHOW. The poster on the right, from 1964, is off-white and creased, for an exhibition by Sam Goodman titled NO-SCULPTURES, and features a black and white photo of an amorphous sculpture.
A page from an art catalog displaying two pieces by Boris Lurie. On the left, an abstract painting on wood titled NO with Lipstick features dripping red paint over white, blue, and brown sections. On the right, a collage titled NO with Mrs. Kennedy shows a photo of Jacqueline Kennedy amidst bold, colorful abstract shapes and fragmented letters.
A page from an art book displaying the 1963 collage NO with Pinup and Flowers by Boris Lurie. The artwork features a green-tinted cutout of a woman among a vibrant bouquet of pink and yellow chrysanthemums. The piece has a distressed border with the word NO scrawled repeatedly in red paint.
An art book spread displaying two works by artist Boris Lurie. On the left, an abstract collage from 1963 titled Altered Man (Cabot Lodge) features dripping black paint over a green and yellow background. On the right is the Altered Man (Cabot Lodge) NO Poster, showing a portrait of a man with translucent letters spelling NO and NON overlaid on the image.
A two-page spread from an art book by Boris Lurie. On the left, his 1963 painting Altered Man (Cabot Lodge) depicts a man in a suit against a dark blue background, his face a shadow with a red abstract mouth. On the right, a collage version of the same subject shows the man's head replaced by chaotic drips of red and yellow paint and an upside-down photo cutout.
An art catalog page with page number 104, showing Boris Lurie's 1963 collage titled Susan Sweet. The artwork features a central cutout of a young blonde girl in a red skirt. Behind her, a photo of a family praying over a Thanksgiving turkey is framed by black-and-white pin-up photos, all set against a dark, painted background.
A page from an art catalog for Boris Lurie titled Fall from Grace, showing two artworks. On the left is a black and white abstract piece of a figure bent over a stool. On the right is an expressionist oil painting of a woman in lingerie lying on her stomach on a red surface. Both pieces are from 1963.
A two-page spread from an art book by Jürgen Joseph Kaumkötter. The left page, on textured brown paper, serves as a title page with large, bold, crinkled pink text reading Boris Lurie and Holocaust Art. The right page, page 119, is white and features the beginning of the essay text in black.
A two-page spread from a book, pages 192 and 193, showing an article in Italian. The piece, titled Boris Lurie – Il trauma senza fine by Jürgen Wilhelm, is presented with white text on a dark grey background. The layout features two main columns with numbered footnotes running vertically in the outer margins.
Boris Lurie. 100th Anniversary
Life with the Dead
€ 44.00
VAT included. Shipping costs will be calculated at checkout
Designed by: Gutes im Falschen - Timon Wißfeld
Edited by: Jürgen Joseph Kaumkötter, Gertrude Stein , Rafael Vostell
April 2024, 240 Pages, 100 Photos
Hardcover
172mm x 244mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-5687-7

HATJE CANTZ VERLAG
Mommsenstr. 27
10629 Berlin
Germany
E-Mail: contact@hatjecantz.de


According to Article 9(7) of the GPSR Regulation, no additional security information is required for books without supplements or special functions.

Press download
Confronting the Trauma with Art
On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Boris Lurie's birthday the catalogue Life with the Dead presents more than fifty works from 1950 to 1970 that illustrate his active commitment to social justice and the memory of the Holocaust. The Jewish artist bore witness in many ways to the horrors of the Holocaust in the German concentration camps. However, his works of art are not only expressions of suffering, but also symbols of hope for the integration of someone who would henceforth belong to the minority of survivors. Friends and companions describe Lurie's development from his beginnings in the 1950s, through the NO! art movement, to his renaissance as one of the main representatives of Holocaust art. Tom Wolfe published his text on an exhibition at Gertrude Stein's gallery, New York in 1964. René Block exhibited Lurie in Berlin, and Achille Bonito Oliva met Boris Lurie's art in 1962 on the occasion of the exhibition Doom Show Boris Lurie and Sam Goodman at the Galeria Arturo Schwarz in Milan. Rafael Vostell and Jürgen Kaumkötter provide the contextual framework for the book, which is complemented by words of greeting from Gertrude Stein, Boris Lurie's lifelong friend and Jürgen Wilhelm from the Landschaftsverband Rheinland.

BORIS LURIE (1924-2008), born in Leningrad and raised in Riga, lost his mother, grandmother, sister and childhood sweetheart on 8 December 1941 in a mass shooting by the National Socialists in the forest of Rumbula (Riga). After surviving several German labor and concentration camps, Lurie emigrated to New York in 1946, where he became a co-founder of NO! art, a provocative art movement of the 1960s. Characterized by subversion, irony, and often through direct references to the Holocaust, Lurie's works were critical comments on Pop Art and the American consumer culture of his time.
EXHIBITION
Scuola Grande San Giovanni Evangelista, Venice
April 20 - November 24, 2024
Recommendations for you