David Smith (sculptor)

(Redirected from David Roland Smith)

Roland David Smith (March 9, 1906 – May 23, 1965) was an influential and innovative American abstract expressionist sculptor and painter, widely known for creating large steel abstract geometric sculptures.

David Smith
Portrait of David Smith, by Dan Budnik
Born
Roland David Smith

(1906-03-09)March 9, 1906
DiedMay 23, 1965(1965-05-23) (aged 59)
Known forSculpture
Notable work
  • Helmholtzian Landscape (1946)
  • Hudson River Landscape (1951)
  • Tanktotem I (1952)
  • Agricola V (1952)
  • Voltri VI (1962)
  • Cubi VI (1963)
MovementAbstract expressionism, Modernist
CUBI VI (1963), Israel Museum, Jerusalem

Born in Decatur, Indiana, Smith initially pursued painting, receiving training at the Art Students League in New York from 1926 to 1930. However, his artistic journey took a transformative turn in the early 1930s when he shifted his focus to sculpture.

In the early phase of his career, he crafted welded metal constructions that incorporated industrial objects, foreshadowing later developments in sculpture.

During the 1940s and 1950s, his work shifted to more personal, landscape-inspired sculptures. These works possessed a delicate linear quality, akin to drawing in metal, and echoed the aesthetics of contemporary painting. Notably, Smith cultivated strong friendships with renowned Abstract Expressionist painters, including Jackson Pollock and Robert Motherwell, illustrating the interplay between different art forms during this period.

By the late 1950s, his sculptures started to assume monumental proportions. Using overlapping geometric plates of highly polished steel, his works developed a reductive and geometric aesthetic. These massive pieces of the 1960s are considered precursors to the minimal "primary structures" that emerged later in the decade, further exemplifying Smith's forward-thinking approach to sculpture.

Early life

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Roland David Smith was born on March 9, 1906, in Decatur, Indiana and moved to Paulding, Ohio in 1921, where he attended high school. His mother was a school teacher and a devout Methodist; his father was a telephone engineer and part-time inventor, who fostered a reverence for machinery in Smith.[1]

From 1924 to 1925, he attended Ohio University in Athens (one year) and the University of Notre Dame, which he left after two weeks because there were no art courses. In between, Smith took a summer job working on the assembly line of the Studebaker automobile factory in South Bend, Indiana. He then briefly studied art and poetry at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.[2]

Moving to New York in 1926, he met Dorothy Dehner (to whom he was married from 1927 to 1952) and, on her advice,[3] joined her painting studies at the Art Students League of New York. Among his teachers were the American painter John Sloan and the Czech modernist painter Jan Matulka, who had studied with Hans Hofmann. Matulka introduced Smith to the work of Picasso, Mondrian, Kandinsky, and the Russian Constructivists. In 1929, Smith met John D. Graham, who later introduced him to the welded-steel sculpture of Pablo Picasso and Julio González.[4]

History

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Early work

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Smith's early friendship with painters such as Adolph Gottlieb and Milton Avery was reinforced during the Depression of the 1930s, when he participated in the Works Progress Administration's Federal Art Project in New York.[3] Through the Russian émigré artist John Graham, Smith met avant-garde artists such as Stuart Davis, Arshile Gorky and Willem de Kooning. He also discovered the welded sculptures of Julio González and Picasso, which led to an increasing interest in combining painting and construction.

In the Virgin Islands in 1931–32, Smith made his first sculpture from pieces of coral.[4] In 1932, he installed a forge and anvil in his studio at the farm in Bolton Landing that he and Dehner had bought a few years earlier. Smith started by making three-dimensional objects from wood, wire, coral, soldered metal and other found materials but soon graduated to using an oxyacetylene torch to weld metal heads, which are probably the first welded metal sculptures ever made in the United States. A single work may consist of several materials, differentiated by varied patinas and polychromy.[3]

 
Early Smith: Ancient Household of 1945, bronze, in the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden

In 1940, the Smiths distanced themselves from the New York art scene and moved permanently to Bolton Landing near Lake George in Upstate New York. At Bolton Landing, he ran his studio like a factory, stocked with large amounts of raw material.[3] The artist would put his sculptures in what is referred to as an upper and lower field, and sometimes he would put them in rows, "as if they were farm crops".[5]

During World War II, Smith worked as a welder for the American Locomotive Company, Schenectady, NY assembling locomotives and M7 tanks. He taught at Sarah Lawrence College.[6]

After 1945

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After the war, with the additional skills that he had acquired, Smith released his pent-up energy and ideas in a burst of creation between 1945 and 1946. His output soared and he went about perfecting his own, very personal symbolism.

Traditionally, metal sculpture meant bronze casts, which artisans produced using a mold made by the artist. Smith, however, made his sculptures from scratch, welding together pieces of steel and other metals with his torch, in much the same way that a painter applied paint to a canvas; his sculptures are almost always unique works.

Smith, who often said, "I belong with the painters", made sculptures of subjects that had never before been shown in three dimensions. He made sculptural landscapes (e.g. Hudson River Landscape), still life sculptures (e.g. Head as Still Life) and even a sculpture of a page of writing (The Letter). Perhaps his most revolutionary concept was that the only difference between painting and sculpture was the addition of a third dimension; he declared that the sculptor's "conception is as free as a that of the painter. His wealth of response is as great as his draftsmanship."[7]

Smith was awarded the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship in 1950, which was renewed the following year. Freed from financial constraints, he made more and larger pieces, and for the first time was able to afford to make whole sculptures in stainless steel. He also began his practice of making sculptures in series, the first of which were the Agricolas of 1951–59. He steadily gained recognition, lecturing at universities and participating in symposia. He separated from Dehner in 1950, with divorce in 1952.[6] During his time as a visiting artist at Indiana University, Bloomington, in 1955 and 1956, Smith produced the Forgings, a series of eleven industrially forged steel sculptures.[8] To create the Forgings, he cut, plugged, flattened, pinched and bent each steel bar, later polishing, rusting, painting, lacquering or waxing its surface.[9]

Beginning in the mid-1950s, Smith explored the technique of burnishing his stainless steel sculptures with a sander, a technique that would find its fullest expression in his Cubi series (1961–65). The scale of his works continued to increase - Tanktotem III of 1953 is 7' tall; Zig I from 1961 is 8'; and 5 Ciarcs from 1963 is almost 13' tall. Finally, in the late 1950s Smith began using spray paint - then still a new medium - to create stenciled shapes out of negative space, in works closely tied to his late-career turn toward geometric planes and solids.[10]

His family was also getting bigger; he remarried and had two daughters, Rebecca (born 1954) and Candida (born 1955). He named quite a few of his later works in honor of his children (e.g., Bec-Dida Day, 1963, Rebecca Circle, 1961, Hi Candida, 1965).

The February 1960 issue of Arts magazine was devoted to Smith's work; later that year he had his first West Coast exhibition, a solo show at the Everett Ellin Gallery in Los Angeles. The following year he rejected a third-place award at the Carnegie International, saying “the awards system in our day is archaic.”[11]

In 1962, Gian Carlo Menotti invited Smith to make sculptures for the Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto.[5] Given open access to an abandoned steel mill and provided with a group of assistants, he produced an amazing 27 pieces in 30 days. Not yet finished with the themes he developed, he had tons of steel shipped from Italy to Bolton Landing, and over the next 18 months he made another 25 sculptures known as the Voltri-Bolton series.

Works

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Major works

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Cubi series

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Smith often worked in series.[12] He is perhaps best known for the Cubis, which were among the last pieces he completed before his death. The sculptures in this series are made of stainless steel with a hand-brushed finish reminiscent of the gestural strokes of Abstract Expressionist painting. The Cubi works consist of arrangements of geometric shapes, which highlight his interest in balance and the contrast between positive and negative space.

In 2005, Cubi XXVIII was sold to Los Angeles philanthropist Eli Broad at Sotheby's for $23.8 million, breaking a record for the most expensive piece of contemporary art ever sold at auction.[13]

Paintings and drawings

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Untitled (Green Linear Nude) by David Smith, c. 1964, Honolulu Museum of Art

Even though he's primarily known as a sculptor, Smith painted and drew throughout his life. By 1953, he was producing between 300 and 400 drawings a year. His subjects encompassed the figure and landscape, as well as gestural, almost calligraphic marks made with egg yolk, Chinese ink and brushes and, in the late 1950s, the "sprays".[3] He usually signed his drawings with the ancient Greek letters delta and sigma, meant to stand for his initials.[14] In the winter of 1963–64, he began a series known as the "Last Nudes". The paintings in this series are essentially drawings of nudes on canvas. He drew with enamel paint squeezed from syringes or bottles onto a canvas spread onto the floor.[15] Untitled (Green Linear Nude) is painted in a metallic olive green enamel, and exemplifies the artist's late action paintings.

Other works

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Prior to the Cubis, Smith gained widespread attention for his sculptures often described as "drawings in space". He was originally trained as a painter and draftsman, and sculptures such as Hudson River Landscape (1950) and The Letter (both 1950) blurred the distinctions between sculpture and painting. These works make use of delicate tracery rather than solid form, with a two-dimensional appearance that contradicts the traditional idea of sculpture in the round.

As with many artists from the Modernist period, including Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko, much of Smith's early work was heavily influenced by Surrealism. Some of the best examples are seen in the Medals for Dishonor, a series of bronze reliefs that speak out against the atrocities of war. Images from these medals are strange, nightmarish, and often violent. His own descriptions give a vivid picture of the medals and strongly express condemnation of these acts, such as this statement about Propaganda for War (1939–40):

The rape of the mind by machines of death – the Hand of God points to atrocities. Atop the curly bull the red cross nurse blows the clarinet. The horse is dead in this bullfight arena – the bull is docile, can be ridden.[16]

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Title Year Description
 
Saw Head 1963 sculpture of iron and bronze, painted
 
Home of the welder 1945 steel sculpture, painted
 
Title Unknown 1940 steel sculpture, painted
 
Saw Head 1963 sculpture of iron and bronze, painted
Voltri XV 1962 steel sculpture
 
Cubi XII 1963 sculpture of stainless steel
 
Cubi XIII 1964 sculpture of stainless steel
 
Big Diamond 1956
Cuby XII 1963 Stainless Steel
Cubi XV 1964 Stainless steel
Cubi XI 1963 Stainless Steel
Cubi XXVI 1965 Stainless Steel
Cubi VII 1963 Stainless Steel

Exhibitions and Collections

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Exhibitions

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Smith's first solo show of drawings and welded-steel sculpture was held at the Willard Gallery in New York in 1938.[4] In 1941, Smith sculptures were included in two traveling exhibitions organized by the Museum of Modern Art and were shown at the Whitney Museum of American Art's Annual exhibition in New York.

Smith represented the United States in the 1951 São Paulo Art Biennial and at the Venice Biennale in 1954 and 1958. Six of his sculptures were included in an exhibition organized by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, that traveled to Paris, Zurich, Düsseldorf, Stockholm, Helsinki, and Oslo in 1953–54; he was given a retrospective exhibition by MoMA in 1957. In 1961, the MoMA organized an exhibition of fifty Smith sculptures that traveled throughout the United States until the spring of 1963. At the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, "David Smith: Cubes and Anarchy" took a thematic look at the sculpture Smith produced between the Depression years and his death.[17]

Recent solo exhibitions (selection)

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Collections

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Works by David Smith are included in major collections worldwide, including the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Storm King Art Center has 13 Smith sculptures in its collection.[18] The Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza Art Collection includes 5 Smith sculptures in is collection.[19]

Recognition

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Death

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Smith died in a car crash near Bennington, Vermont on May 23, 1965.[9] He was 59 years old.

Writings

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  • Gray, Cleve, ed. David Smith by David Smith: Sculpture and Writings. New York, London: Thames & Hudson, 1968, rpt. 1989. ISBN 978-0-500-27520-7

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.2274.html#:~:text=His%20mother%20was%20a%20school,son%20a%20reverence%20for%20machinery.
  2. ^ In Depth: David Smith Archived January 9, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
  3. ^ a b c d e David Smith Museum of Modern Art, New York.
  4. ^ a b c David Smith Archived 2014-01-07 at the Wayback Machine Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.
  5. ^ a b William Zimmer (September 19, 1999), "The Sculptures Of David Smith" The New York Times.
  6. ^ a b "David Smith Biography, Art, and Analysis of Works". theartstory.org. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  7. ^ Everyday Art Quarterly 23 (1952)
  8. ^ Roberta Smith (January 2, 2014), The Silent Totems of a Restless Quest The New York Times.
  9. ^ a b "David Smith: The Forgings, October 29, 2013 - January 11, 2014" Gagosian Gallery, New York.
  10. ^ David Smith: A Centennial, February 3 - May 14, 2006 Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.
  11. ^ Cleve Gray, David Smith by David Smith (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1968), 40
  12. ^ David Smith, Cubi X (1963) Museum of Modern Art, New York.
  13. ^ Muchnic, Suzanne (November 12, 2005). "Eli Broad buys a prized 'Cubi'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 9, 2024.
  14. ^ Christopher Knight (April 14, 2011), Art review: 'David Smith: Drawing Space' at Margo Leavin Gallery Los Angeles Times.
  15. ^ Honolulu Museum of Art, wall label, Untitled (Green Linear Nude) by David Smith, c. 1964, enamel on canvas, accession TCM.2007.1.5
  16. ^ David Smith: Medals for Dishonor, (New York: Independent Curators Incorporated, 1996), 48.
  17. ^ Christopher Knight (April 5, 2011), Art review: 'David Smith: Cubes and Anarchy' at Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles Times.
  18. ^ Carol Vogel (January 5, 2012), Whitney and Storm King to Share a David Smith The New York Times.
  19. ^ "Empire State Plaza Art Collection".

Further reading

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  • Gimenez, Carmen, ed. David Smith; A Centennial. New York: Guggenheim Museum, 2006.
  • Krauss, Rosalind. Terminal Iron Works: The Sculpture of David Smith. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1971.
  • David Smith: Medals for Dishonor. New York: Independent Curators Incorporated, 1996.
  • Smith, Candida N. The Fields of David Smith. New York, London: Thames & Hudson, 1999.
  • Wilkin, Karen. David Smith. New York: Abbeville Press, 1984.
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