Breadcrumb

Book Launch: Looking at the Woman in a Bomb Blast

Research
Culture and languages

You are warmly invited to join the book launch for Looking at the Woman in a Bomb Blast, an experimental artist’s book by Daniel Jewesbury.

Lecture,
Seminar,
Exhibition
Date
3 Apr 2025
Time
18:00 - 20:00

Organizer
ArtMonitor

Artist, researcher and writer Daniel Jewesbury will read from his obsessive, excessive exploration of a single work of sculpture and the ‘meanings’ exploding from it. Daniel will describe the book’s development over more than 20 years, and with the book’s designer, Alexandra Papademetriou, and artist and researcher Jason E. Bowman, he’ll discuss how it found its final form, and how image and text combine to produce this many-layered ekphrasis. Ord&Bild editor, Ann Ighe, will chair the discussion.

Alexandra Papademetriou is an artist, curator and designer, based in Gothenburg. Jason E. Bowman is an artist with a curatorial practice, based in London. Jason is a senior lecturer and research at HDK-Valand Academy of Art & Design.

A slender young woman falls backwards, blown off her feet by a bomb. Frozen in time, her bare legs stick up, her hands grasping the air. Her face is covered by a page from a newspaper. People approach to look at her, bending down to study the folds of her dress, the immature curve of her thigh, her neat toes, splayed in surprise.

The woman is a sculpture, made by the Irish artist F. E. McWilliam in 1974. In this bronze figure’s awkwardly graceful near-death contortions, entire histories of pain, death, sex and visual pleasure have been condensed.

Looking at the Woman in a Bomb Blast is an experimental artist’s book that uses different voices to unravel these histories: a writer labours over an elaborate ‘explanation’ of what she means, while the voice of the Woman herself offers acerbic insights and asides. In a series of short chapters, they assert their contrasting ideas, insisting on their own approaches to discovering her ‘true meaning’: by turns affective, confessional, detached and analytical.

Looking at the Woman in a Bomb Blast book cover