Schube Inka (ed.), Martha Rosler: Passionate Signals, exh. cat., Sprengel Museum, Hanovre (January–May 2005), Ostfildern, Hatje Cantz, 2005.
→Buchloh Benjamin H. D., Conversation avec Martha Rosler…, Villeurbanne, Institut d’art contemporain, 1999
→Zegher Catherine de (ed.), Martha Rosler: Positions in the Life World, exh. cat., Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, (December 5, 1998–Januart 30, 1999), Birmingham / Vienna / Cambridge, Mass., Ikon Gallery / Generali Foundation / MIT Press, 1998
Martha Rosler: God Bless America, MACBA, Barcelona, 18 May–15 October 2017
→Martha Rosler, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris, 30 October–1 December 2002
→Martha Rosler : Rétrospective, Institut d’Art Contemporain, Villeurbanne, 12 February–30 April 1999
American photographer and video artist.
Martha Rosler is a major international artist whose work has left an indelible mark on the contemporary arts scene. Making use of photomontage, films or installations, her shape-shifting work attest to her desire and policy to create works that shed light on the issues that lie below the surface, such as how we live our lives or how we allow the United States government to speak for us. In 1974, this young political activist was studying at the University of California in San Diego, a place rife with protests and philosophical and aesthetic debates, where she rubbed shoulders with artists such as Allan Kaprow or Miriam Shapiro (1923), and philosophers such as Jean-François Lyotard, who will have an enduring influence on her ideas. Through her work, she adopts scathing and critical positions against the Vietnam war and on feminism. Rosler initially focused on painting, while developing a parallel interest in photography.