Julia Phillips Positioner, 2016 Ceramic, steel 44⅛ × 24⅜ × 30¾ in

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Julia Phillips Positioner, 2016 Ceramic, steel 44⅛ × 24⅜ × 30¾ in
Julia Phillips at Julie de Libran, Fall 2023 Haute Couture
Julia Phillips | Nourisher, 2022
Ceramic, medical PVC tubes, stainless steel, and steel cable
I was trying to draw borders, but also enclosures and passageways, curves that could be the inside of the body or negative space.
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“Somewhere, somehow, in the space left unexplored by bureaucrats and biologists, there existed possibilities. There might be magic to be found.”
Bear by Julia Phillips
Books Read June 2024
Direct Sunlight by Christine Sneed
I fell in love with Sneed's writing after reading The Virginity of Famous Men earlier this year. This is another strong collection with her trademark subtle shifting glances into people's delicate lives and emotional states. Excellent work.
Cocktail by Lisa Alward
This was the final of the 2024 Danuta Gleed nominees I had to read. The funny thing is this is a lot like Sneed's work; literary fiction about relationships, but this didn't resonate. Probably found it the least engaging of the nominees but what do I know? It won the Danuta Gleed.
The Doll's Alphabet by Camilla Grudova.
Also a Danuta Gleed nominee but from a previous year. I saw this mentioned in a Twitter thread about best short story collections. Lived up to the hype. Eerie speculative fiction.
The Dance of the Demons by Esther Singer Kreitman
I heard someone mention Kreitman in the context of being Isaac Bashevis Singer's neglected and forgotten older literary sister. Was she an undiscovered amazing author buried by the patriarchy? Well, not in English she wasn't. I found the novel quite sad and a bit of a slog. An interesting read in the way it captures a way of European Jewry about to be completely obliterated but not a great read on its own. The edition I read included essays and notes on the translation which were very interesting though.
Things That Cause Inappropriate Happiness by Danila Botha
I wanted to like this so much. I found it incredibly mid. Also not the author's fault but there was an insane amount of typos in my copy, like 20+ which I've never had in a book before.
Bear by Julia Phillips
Went in and out of like with this one but I thought it stuck the landing incredibly well.
Annie Bot by Sierra Greer
Quick and heartbreaking look at a sex bot who gains sentience. I thought this was incredibly heartbreaking and wonderful.
Julia Phillips Fixator (#2) 2017 Ceramic, nylon hardware, steel 177 × 64 × 79 cm
Julia Phillips, Nourisher, 2022, ceramic, medical PVC tubes, stainless steel, and steel cable, 69 1/2 x 32 x 24''. © Julia Phillips.
Books Read in May:
1). Charming Billy (Alice McDermott)
2). The Baby on the Fire Escape: Creativity, Motherhood, and the Mind-Baby Problem (Julie Phillips)
3). The Dressmaker (Beryl Bainbridge)
4). The Pleasing Hour (Lily King)
5). Eat, Memory: Great Writers at the Table (ed. Amanda Hesser)
6). The Mirror & the Light (Hilary Mantel)
7). Disappearing Earth (Julia Phillips)
8). A Life of One’s Own: Nine Women Writers Begin Again (Joanna Biggs)
9). Kitchen Bliss: Musings on Food and Happiness (Laura Calder)
10). A Month in the Country (J.L. Carr)
11). Dinner in Rome: A History of the World in One Meal (Andreas Viestad)
12). Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader (Anne Fadiman)