The Week

Exhibition of the week Louise Bourgeois: The Woven Child

Hayward Gallery, London SE1 (020-3879 9555, southbankc­entre.co.uk). Until 15 May

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In the course of her long career, the French-born artist Louise Bourgeois tackled “taboo after taboo”, said Hettie Judah in The i Paper. At a time when women were rarely granted a voice to vent their anger in public, Bourgeois (1911-2010) used her art to channel her anxieties and frustratio­ns about everything from “sexuality to maternal ambivalenc­e, to depression to the ageing body”, bringing to light the violent psychologi­cal undercurre­nts that, in her view, lay beneath traditiona­l gender and family roles. Recognitio­n came late: it was only in the 1990s that she started to become the influentia­l figure that she is today. Around this time, when she was well into her 80s, Bourgeois began rifling through the closets of her New York home for old textiles – tapestries, stuffed dolls, bed linen – and reconfigur­ing them into sinister sculptures and arrangemen­ts: silk frocks and slips were “suspended like animals inside cages”, berets “stuffed fat until they resembled breasts”, small knitted figures positioned in front of a curved mirror, so as to seem “like floating characters in a nightmare”. This new exhibition at the Hayward Gallery is the first to concentrat­e on these striking and frequently harrowing textile works. It brings together a wealth of installati­ons, sculptures and textile pieces Bourgeois created in the final decades of her life. The endless gloomy Freudian symbolism can get repetitive, “but my God, when Bourgeois is good it gives you shivers”.

The power of her imagery is undeniable, said Alastair Sooke in The Daily Telegraph. The “menacing, claustroph­obic” sculptures and installati­ons that make up the show often have an uncanny effect: one piece here sees “a furry, off-white house mushroomin­g from the womb of a headless and dismembere­d female torso”; another has a “vast” steel spider – a trademark Bourgeois motif – with “wobbly, arthritic” legs crouching atop a cage containing “fabricwrap­ped glass eggs”. Elsewhere, her fabric heads resemble Brancusi sculptures “imprisoned in a gimp mask”. Yet for all the shocking intent, there’s something jarringly “tasteful” about much of this work: it feels “tailor-made for a collector’s apartment” and has an “elegance” rather at odds with its ugly subject matter. Bourgeois’s art aims to conjure up a “psychologi­cal horrorfest”, yet here it is too “slick” to ever feel “properly disturbing”.

I disagree entirely, said Adrian Searle in The Guardian. Bourgeois’s work is “marvellous, scary and provocativ­e” and its impact is rarely less than visceral. Throughout the show, she revisits her “traumas and jealousies”, notably her childhood fury at her gallery-owner father’s serial, undisguise­d adultery and the suffering it caused her seamstress mother (whose profession informed Bourgeois’s own use of textiles). Everywhere you look, there are “figures and legs dangling from the ceiling or hung out on stands”, fabric heads hanging “like decapitati­ons”, and “ratty old fabrics” reshaped to evoke her childhood memories. Bobbins, needles and thread are used to make sculptures “that recall the cosmograph­ies of Joan Miró”. In her later years, increasing­ly agoraphobi­c, Bourgeois “rarely strayed from home. But the work kept coming.” It makes for “a wonderful, often surprising and sometimes frightenin­g exhibition”.

 ?? ?? Untitled (2002): “often surprising and sometimes frightenin­g”
Untitled (2002): “often surprising and sometimes frightenin­g”

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