"The Artists Laboratory" series presents the more experimental and less familiar work of contemporary artists, opening up the creative process to explore the conceptual, visual and practical issues with which they engage. For the painter Hughie ODonoghue RA (b. 1953), this process involves research into his familys past in particular his fathers experiences in the Second World War an ongoing project that he likens to a draughtsmans exploration of subject-matter. Seeking in his art to remember events that he did not witness himself, to put flesh on the bones of history, ODonoghue unites this immersive investigation in personal and public archives with his preoccupation with art history, artefacts and mythology, creating poetic and moving works of universal significance. In this book, the fifth in the "Artists Laboratory series", ODonoghue and his fellow Royal Academician Grayson Perry discuss ideas of remembrance and the subjective re-telling of history, while ODonoghue himself reflects on the personal and art-historical references that inform his practice. The book will also be published in a limited edition containing a specially made print signed by the artist.
- ISBN13 9781907533365
- Publish Date 5 November 2012
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 30 January 2017
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Royal Academy of Arts
- Edition New ed.
- Format Paperback
- Pages 48
- Language English