Louise Bourgeois – Be Calm (from Recueil des Secrets)


Louise Bourgeois (French-American, 1911-2010)

Be Calm (from Recueil des Secrets de Louise Bourgeois), 2005

Medium: Drypoint with selective wiping, on wove paper; plus offset lithograph with embossing (book plate); and artist’s book

Dimensions: 18.8 x 12.5 cm (7 3/8 x 4 15/16 in)

Edition of 40 plus 15 AP, 5 HC, 2 PP: Drypoint and book plate both hand-signed and numbered in pencil

Printer: Harlan & Weaver, New York

Catalogue raisonné: MoMA Cat. No. 615

Condition: Excellent (contained in original brown portfolio box with Latin and image embossed on the front in gold)

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About this artwork

Louise Bourgeois – Be Calm (from Recueil des Secrets)

Louise Bourgeois's Be Calm (from Recueil des Secrets de Louise Bourgeois) is a limited edition artwork published in 2005 as part of an intimate artist's book project. The edition combines a drypoint etching with selective wiping and an offset lithograph with embossing, uniting image and text within a finely crafted portfolio and book format.

The work reflects Bourgeois's long-standing engagement with emotional states such as anxiety, vulnerability, and self-soothing. The handwritten words "Be Calm," set within a softly colored, organic form, echo her recurring use of language as a psychological anchor, functioning as both instruction and reassurance. This interplay between text and image situates the edition within her broader practice of translating deeply personal experience into symbolic visual form.

Produced by Harlan & Weaver, New York, and published in 2005 in a limited edition of 50, Be Calm is hand-signed and numbered by the artist and catalogued in the MoMA catalogue raisonné. As with many of her limited edition prints, the text-based artwork demonstrates how Bourgeois extended the emotional intensity of her sculptures and drawings into the medium of printmaking, using the book format as a space for reflection, intimacy, and controlled disclosure.

Louise Bourgeois - I Have Been to Hell and Back (Red)

About Louise Bourgeois

Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010) was a French-American artist whose seven-decade career shaped the course of modern and contemporary art. Working across sculpture, installation, drawing, painting, and limited edition prints, she developed a deeply personal visual language focused on memory, family, sexuality, fear, and the subconscious. Her work is widely understood as autobiographical, using art as a means to confront psychological states and unresolved emotional experiences.

Bourgeois is best known for her large-scale sculptures, most notably Maman, the monumental spider form that has become a defining image of late 20th-century art. The spider functions as a complex symbol of motherhood, protection, and vulnerability. Her Cells installations further expanded her sculptural practice, creating enclosed architectural spaces filled with objects, textiles, and sculptural fragments that evoke isolation, trauma, and remembrance.

Alongside her sculptures, Bourgeois produced an extensive body of fine art prints and works on paper. These signed and limited edition prints translate her recurring motifs—organic forms, bodily imagery, and psychological tension—into intimate, graphic compositions. Her printmaking practice allowed her to revisit themes central to her sculpture while exploring line, repetition, and symbolism in a more distilled format.

Often associated with feminist art, Bourgeois challenged traditional representations of gender, identity, and the body, influencing generations of contemporary artists. Her artworks, sculptures, and editions remain central to discussions of emotional expression and psychological depth in contemporary art, securing her position as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.

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