Welcome to MoMA.org. To take full advantage of all the site’s features, including the option to save works in the collection, please upgrade your browser to Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, or Internet Explorer 9. See our help page for more information.
Within the edition, selective wiping varies significantly from impression to impression. (See two examples in the Evolving Composition Diagram.) Five impressions (3/9, 4/9, 5/9, 8/9, and 9/9) include a proof of the same composition on the verso. The T.P. impression has no selective wiping.
Outside the edition there are 14 unique variants that incorporate this plate, printed alone or in combination with other plates in multi-panel works. These all include extensive hand additions and sometimes partial inking of the plate.
When the plate is used alone, the work is included in the Evolving Composition Diagram. When it is printed with other plates, it is included in Related Works in the Catalogue.
See Evolving Composition Diagram: “À Baudelaire (#2)” “À Baudelaire (#3)” “À Baudelaire (#4)” “À Baudelaire (#5)” “À Baudelaire (#6)” “À Baudelaire (#7)” “À Baudelaire (#8): Silence is a Form of Intimacy” “The Geometry of Desire (#2)” Untitled, no. 4 of 6, from the series "I Give Everything Away”
See Related Works in the Catalogue: “À Baudelaire (#1)” “À Baudelaire (#9): The Impossible” “The Geometry of Pleasure (#1)” “The Geometry of Pleasure (#3)” “The Geometry of Pleasure (#4)”
Background:
Benjamin Shiff, the director of the Osiris imprint, collaborated with Bourgeois in a highly experimental phase of printmaking that occupied the last years of her life, from 2005 to 2010. He first established a working relationship with the artist in the 1990s, but the late period is particularly noteworthy for the innovative and complex large-scale projects that evolved at that time. Shiff made use of professional workshops for printing, but he oversaw the creation of the printing plates as Bourgeois worked on them in her home studio. He also provided assistance as she added extensive hand additions and texts, and as she combined individual compositions into multi-panel works and illustrated books.
Osiris put together a grouping of Bourgeois's late, large-scale soft ground etchings under the title "Turning Inwards." Nine sets were announced. Each "Turning Inwards" set is unique, containing a different number of prints. Sets include editioned prints as well as early proofs. Some also have multiple impressions of the same composition, due to differences in inking and wiping.
The "Turning Inwards" sets are not considered formal series that must be shown in their entirety; the prints in each set can be displayed separately.
Set #1 of 9 contains 67 prints and is in the Collection of the Museum of Modern Art. Set #2 contains 43 prints and is in the collection of the Tate Modern. Set #3 contains 38 prints. Set #4 contains 39 prints. The contents of sets #5-9 were not known by MoMA cataloguers, as of 2018.
The title "Turning Inwards" is given to the overall grouping and is also the title of one of the individual compositions within it. Titles that may appear in the various "Turning Inwards" sets are as follows:
1. À Baudelaire 2. Abandoned 3. Accumulations 4. Are You in Orbit? (#1) 5. Are You in Orbit? (#2) 6. The Awakening 7. The Chain of Events 8. The Fall 9. La Famille 10. Les Fleurs 11. I See You!!! 12. Incognito 13. Just Like Me 14. Knots 15. Leaves 16. Let My Children Come 17. Look Up! 18. Losing It 19. Love and Kisses 20. La Maladie de l'Amour 21. My Inner Life 22. My Secret Life 23. The Nest 24. Opening Up 25. The Pacifiers 26. Paddle Woman 27. Passages 28. Pendule 29. The Prey of an Anxiety 30. Sangsue 31. The Smell of Eucalyptus (#1) 32. The Smell of Eucalyptus (#2) 33. The Stretch 34. Swaying 35. Swelling 36. Turning Inwards 37. The Twist 38. The Unfolding 39. Up and Up
This impression is in MoMA's set #1 of 9.
Curatorial Remarks:
In the center of this composition, there is a small gap between the two vertical parts of the plate. The gap is filled with black crayon and black watercolor wash additions to match the surrounding plate tone and create the illusion of a single plate.
If you are interested in reproducing images from The Museum of Modern Art web site, please visit the Image Permissions page (www.moma.org/permissions). For additional information about using content from MoMA.org, please visit About this Site (www.moma.org/site).