Chris Lusk:
CLASS OF 1980
Carver High SchoolClass of 1980
Atlanta, GA
Chris's Story
Chris is from Sherman, Texas. She is In a relationship with Chris McCulley. Her schools include Carver High School. She later attended Southern Utah University and attended West Texas A&M University. She works(ed) at Utah Shakespeare Festival, Southern Utah University, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi.
Chris's interests include Ancient history, Traveling the World, New York Yankees, New Orleans Saints, LA Lakers, Drew Brees. Music she likes includes Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Nirvana, Neil Young. Books she likes include WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Infamous Poet and Playwright, Wuthering Heights. Movies she likes include Midnight Cowboy, Dr Zivago, A Clockwork Orange. TV shows she likes include Push Girls, True Blood, The Catherine Tate Show.
One of Chris's favorite quotes is:""Fool, Don't you see that I could have poisened you a hundred times Had I been able to live without you"...Cleopatra VII
"In the valley of the blind, the one-eyed woman is queen"
I would like the work to be non-work. This means that it would find its way beyond my preconceptionsâ¦It is the unknown quantity from which and wh...Expand for more
ere I want to go. As a thing, an object, it accedes to its non-logical self. It is something, it is nothing.
â From Hesseâs statement for her 1968 exhibition Eva Hesse: Chain Polymers at the Fischbach Gallery, New York, quoted in Lucy R. Lippard, Eva Hesse (New York; New York University Press, 1976), p. 131
Eva Hesse died in 1970 of a brain tumor, aged 34. Her exhibiting career spanned ten years, from 1961-1970. Her production during that brief decade was prodigious - in quantity, in the increasingly radical originality of her practice, and in the accelerating urgency and visionary daring of her artistic evolution. Hang Up and Repetition Nineteen III were included, along with hundreds of other works, in the comprehensive Eva Hesse retrospective co-organized by Elizabeth Sussman and Renate Petzinger for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. In the thirty years since her death, Hesse has survived her co-option as a feminist martyr (the Sylvia Plath of visual art) to become recognized as one of the most important and profoundly influential artists in the second half of the 20th Century.".
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