Skip to content
Lucy Writers Platform

Lucy Writers Platform

  • Home
  • About us
    • About LWP
    • Editors
    • Writers
    • About Lucy Cavendish
    • Constitution
  • My Cambridge
    • Lucy Interviews
    • Lucy Features
    • Postgraduate Corner
      • My Research Articles
  • Write for us
    • Submissions and Contact
    • Special editions
    • Directory
  • Writing
    • Arts
      • Art and design
      • Books
      • Dance
      • Fashion
      • Film and Media
      • Music
      • Theatre
    • Creative Writing
      • Fiction
      • Flash Fiction
      • Poetry
      • Resources
    • Environment
    • General
    • Health and Wellbeing
      • Lucy Features
      • Short read
    • Interviews
    • Opinion
    • Politics
      • Features
      • My Feminisms
    • STEM

Tag: Louise Bourgeois

Drawn into Being: the drawings of Louise Bourgeois and Jean Frémon’s Nativity

22nd December 202023rd December 2020  Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou

In this creative ‘Christmas’ essay, Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou reflects on the power and therapeutic potential of drawing in her own life, the artistic practise of Louise Bourgeois, and Jean Frémon’s new text Nativity (Les Fugitives).

Read More “Drawn into Being: the drawings of Louise Bourgeois and Jean Frémon’s Nativity”
Posted in Art and design, Arts, Books, Creative Writing, Non-FictionTagged: Ann Coxon, art, Art History, art therapy, Artist, Books in translation, Christmas, Cole Swensen, creativity, drawing, Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou, Jean Frémon, John Berger, Languages, Les Fugitives, Louise Bourgeois, Lucy Lippard, Motherhood, Nativity, portraiture, pregnancy, Translation, unconscious

Postcards in Isolation 8: Guerrilla Girls, The Advantages of Being a Woman Artist, 1988

13th June 202020th June 2020  Kathryn Cutler-MacKenzie

Kathryn Cutler-MacKenzie reflects on the seminal work, The Advantages of Being a Woman Artist, 1988, by Guerrilla Girls, and calls for women in the art world to be more politically engaged and active in their practise.

Read More “Postcards in Isolation 8: Guerrilla Girls, The Advantages of Being a Woman Artist, 1988”
Posted in Art and design, ArtsTagged: Art History, Charlotte Burns, Feminism, Gaby Porter, Guerrilla Girls, Julia Halpern, Linda Nochlin, Lockdown Living, Louise Bourgeois, Lucy Steggals, National Portrait Gallery, Postcards in Isolation, Tate
  • ‘Missing the Train’ & other poems by Susan Wilson
    By Susan Wilson
  • Interview with acclaimed poet & novelist, Rosie Garland: ‘Rosie Lugosi, my alter-ego lesbian vampire queen, was all about disobedient queerness’
    By Elodie Rose Barnes
  • ‘The Composition of Us’ by Johanna Robinson
    By Johanna Robinson
  • About us
  • Writers
  • About Lucy Cavendish
  • Write for us
  • Submissions and Contact
  • Special editions
Top