This monograph on Sarah Lucas explores the issues relating to her art and ideas and the historical moment they inhabit. It examines six key works in depth highlighting, her perennial themes of sex, death, and gender.
The work of Sarah Lucas (b. 1962), often assembled from everyday materials and dealing with recurrent themes of sex, death, and gender, is laced with a distinctive bleak humor. Her best-known piece is Two Fried Eggs and a Kebab, a work that wittily combines the aforementioned materials with a junk-shop table and manages to comment on not only sexism and gender but also mortality, language, and the tradition of the female nude in Western art. Matthew Collings explores Lucas's art and ideas in this first thorough look at one of today's most important artists.