Smithsonian American Art Museum Presents "Martin Puryear: Multiple Dimensions" Exhibition Includes Drawings, Sculptures and Prints That Provide an Intimate Look at the Mind of Martin Puryear Our Coverage Sponsored by Maine Woolens
Martin Puryear, Bower, 1980, sitka spruce and pine. Smithsonian American Art Museum, © Martin Puryear, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery
Martin Puryear. Untitled, 2001, color hard and softground etching, with drypoint on cream Japanese paper, laid down on white wove paper (chine collé). The Art Institute of Chicago. © Martin Puryear, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery.
Martin Puryear. MLK Elegi, 1968, softground etching and aquatint on shaped plate, with burnishing, printed in brown on ivory wove paper. © Martin Puryear, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery.
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Martin Puryear is best known for refined, handmade sculptures primarily made of wood. Puryear's drawings and prints are less well known but are essential to his studio practice. "Martin Puryear: Multiple Dimensions"is the first exhibition dedicated to showing works on paper in context with the artist's sculptures and offers an unprecedented look into Puryear's inspirations, methods and transformative process. This exhibition explores the way in which Puryear takes an elemental form and reworks it, sometimes over many years, through experiments in scale, material and medium, often switching between two and three dimensions.
"Martin Puryear: Multiple Dimensions" is on view from May 27 through Sept. 5. It includes 72 objects, including 14 sculptures, spanning Puryear's career from his college days to the present. Thirteen works from the Smithsonian American Art Museum collection are on display, including "Bower," a major wood sculpture, and "Cane," a portfolio of woodcuts Puryear created to illustrate a new edition of Jean Toomer's influential 1923 literary masterpiece. Nearly half of the artworks on view have been borrowed from the artist, and several are being shown publicly for the first time.
The presentation at the Smithsonian American Art Museum also focuses on the importance of Puryear's public art and features maquettes and drawings for several of his major outdoor public sculptures, including "Bearing Witness," installed at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, D.C., and the new 40-foot-tall "Big Bling," which debuted May 16 in Madison Square Park in New York City.
The exhibition is organized by Mark Pascale, the Janet and Craig Duchossois Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Art Institute of Chicago.Karen Lemmey, sculpture curator, is coordinating the exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The Smithsonian American Art Museum is the final stop for the exhibition's national tour.
"We are proud to feature this native Washingtonian with a stellar international reputation," said Betsy Broun, the Margaret and Terry Stent Director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. "This exhibition reveals new insights into the work of a long-recognized contemporary master."
"This exhibition provides an exciting look at the persistence and evolution of ideas in Puryear's work going back to the early 1960s," Lemmey said. "I am particularly delighted to see 'Bower,' one of Puryear's acknowledged masterpieces from the museum's collection, situated with works on paper from other collections so we can see how Puryear returned to latticework forms and ideas about shelter across the decades."
Puryear was born in 1941 in Washington, D.C., and was raised in the city. After earning a bachelor's degree in fine art from Catholic University, he was a Peace Corps volunteer in Sierra Leone from 1964 to 1966. Several drawings are from these formative years, where he was inspired by the region's plants, animals, buildings and people. Since then, Puryear has returned to many of these themes, experimenting with scale, materials and varying levels of abstraction. Motifs such as the Phrygian cap, human heads and vessels are meditations on powerful, universal concepts such as freedom and shelter, distilled into their essential forms. The exhibition examines this evolution, offering a 360-degree view of the creative process of a contemporary master.
About the Smithsonian American Art Museum
The Smithsonian American Art Museum celebrates the vision and creativity of Americans with artworks in all media spanning more than three centuries. Its National Historic Landmark building is located at Eighth and F streets N.W., above the Gallery Place/Chinatown Metrorail station. Museum hours are 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily (closedDec. 25). Admission is free. Follow the museum on Twitter, YouTube, Tumblr, Instagram,Facebook, Flickr, Pinterest, iTunes U and ArtBabble.Museum information (recorded):(202) 633-7970. Smithsonian information: (202) 633-1000. Website: americanart.si.edu.