<p><b>A richly illustrated exploration of Hannah Wilke¿s provocative art and trailblazing feminism</b><br><br>One of the most groundbreaking artists to emerge in American art in the 1960s, Hannah Wilke consistently challenged the prevailing narratives of women¿s bodies and their representation throughout her career, until her untimely death in 1993. Wilke established a uniquely feminist iconography in virtually all of the mediums she engaged with¿painting, sculpture, photography, video, and performance art¿and offered a life-affirming expression of vitality and bodily pleasure in her work.<br><br><i>Hannah Wilke: Art for Life¿s Sake</i> highlights the artist¿s full range of expression, bringing together photographs, works on paper, video, and examples of Wilke¿s sculptures in clay and other, nonconventional materials such as latex, kneaded erasers, and chewing gum. New object photography brings clarity to Wilke¿s boundary-crossing art practice, making many of her rarely shown works acc