Somatic Sculpture

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A01=Lisi Linster
anachronistic gaze
animate
Author_Lisi Linster
Category=AB
Category=ABA
Category=AFKB
Category=AGA
Category=AGR
Category=QDTN
Christian imagery
contemporary art
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Georges Didi-Huberman
haptic
haptic visuality
life cast
materiality
medievalism
multisensory
object encounter
premodern
sensory
somatic
vibrant matter
viewer perception
visuality

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350575158
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores the return of the somatic – the bodily and emotional response that an object produces in the viewer – in contemporary life-cast sculpture, revealing how the body-centricity of pre-modern Christian artistic traditions can play out in contemporary art practices. Connecting a chocolate Jesus with the Eucharist, bodily fluids with Adam and Eve, and corporeal fragmentation with medieval relics, it considers how art objects can play on our innate sense of self, trauma, and mortality, and how the literal imprint of the body in an artwork, can evoke strong feelings of loss, grief, fear, and above all, disgust.

The book presents detailed readings of four influential artworks from the last 30 years: Cosimo Cavallaro’s Sweet Jesus (2005), Kiki Smith’s Untitled (1990), Marc Quinn’s Self (iterative, 1991-present), and Berlinde de Bruyckere’s Elie (2009), revealing a rich kaleidoscope of references to pre-modern imagery and traditions. Constructed from transient, organic materials, these intimate works close the gap between artist, artwork, and audience; we see the artist, and ourselves, within them. Sharing an inherent ambiguity, they represent life yet embrace death: individual and universal, present yet absent, disgusting yet alluring.

Building on recent debates in contemporary art practice, this book will add an important perspective to discourses surrounding the survival of the image, embedded memory, audience participation, the recurrence of Christian imagery in contemporary art, and the impact of sight as multifaceted mediator of aesthetic reception. Author Lisi Linster deconstructs the aesthetic encounter by looking at the semiotics of each artwork alongside their phenomenological aspect, revealing how pre-modern Christian themes interact directly with the unique tangible quality of life-cast sculpture, and exploring how this can play out sensorially in the contemporary art gallery.

Lisi Linster is an Art Historian at the National Museum of Archaeology, History, and Art, Luxembourg. Previously, she was Curator for Contemporary Art at Kunsthalle Trier, Germany, and Lecturer at the University of Glasgow, UK.

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