ANU PÕDER

ANU PÕDER.jpeg

Dublin Core

Title

ANU PÕDER

Description

Anu Põder (1947–2013) is one of Estonia’s most revelatory voices of the last five decades. Her work has stood out since the 1970s as uniquely crafted, originally conceived, and deeply personal. Yet, because it was somehow out of sync with the then established art landscape in Estonia, it has been overlooked for many years. Põder is known for exploring the human body, highlighting the fragility, impermanence, and ephemerality of life in a series of highly evocative sculptures. Throughout her career, she employed unconventional materials such as textile, wax, plaster, soap, plastic, and wood to compose delicate assemblages. Working at the cusp of two major eras—the Soviet occupation of Estonia, which began in 1940, and the new independence gained in 1991—Põder embraced the uncertainty of identity of the Estonian people, working as one of the very few women artists in a decidedly male context and focusing on female subjectivity alongside other international artists such as Magdalena Abakanowicz, Louise Bourgeois, Ana Mendieta, and Alina Szapocznikow. –from the curatorial statement written by Cecilia Alemani upon the event of the exhibition titled, "Anu Põder: Space for My Body"

Text source: https://www.muzeumsusch.ch/en/1795/Anu-Poder-Space-for-My-Body

Creator

Põder, Anu

Rights

Image and text for research purposes only under Section 29 of the Copyright Act of Canada

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Citation

Põder, Anu, “ANU PÕDER,” Index of Contemporary Artists, accessed May 17, 2024, https://craigleonard.omeka.net/items/show/770.