David Smith worked as a welder at the Studebaker automobile plant in South Bend, Indiana, during the summer of 1925. The skills he gained on the job would become essential in the creation of
his massive welded metal sculptures and would help him gain recognition as a leading American sculptor of his generation.
Guggenheim Fellowships in the early 1950s provided Smith the means to begin making large-scale iron and steel works, many of which contain totemic forms that demonstrate the artist’s own interest in Neolithic art and those of the abstract expressionists in “primitive” art.
Despite appearing to have been made spontaneously, Smith’s balanced, geometric sculptures were carefully designed to be seen from all angles, changing their surroundings as the viewer changes perspective. Smith thought of his work as “calligraphy in space.”
Although best known for monumental stainless steel constructions such as Sheldon's Superstructure on 4, Smith pursued his ideas in a visual language that spanned painting, drawing, and sculpture. Smith worked deftly across these media and developed a new technique for drawing in the course of fabricating sculpture. After welding pieces of steel on his studio floor, Smith discovered that the flying sparks left behind a burned, stencil-like image of the sculpture. He then translated that effect to canvas and paper by spraying and removing scraps of cardboard, metal, and other materials.
The Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati organized Art and Race Matters: The Career of Robert Colescott, the first comprehensive retrospective of the artist. The painting Knowledge of the Past is the Key to the Future: The Other Washingtons, loaned from Sheldon for the exhibition, was selected for the cover of the 252-page catalogue that accompanies it.
It makes sense that this work would be selected to represent Colescott's perspectives on race, historical heritage, and lived experience. The painting depicts individuals—famous, infamous, and unsung—who share the well-established surname. The fact that Washington was the name most frequently chosen by former slaves to assert their rightful freedom is underscored by the inclusion of the profile of George Washington.
Made of small pieces of sheet metal that he cut and linked together, the format of Alexander Calder’s Sumac II revolutionized sculpture. Instead of placing the work on a pedestal or on the floor, Calder suspended his “mobiles” from the ceiling, where they could gently sway in response to moving air. For Calder, red was a compelling color. In a 1962 interview, he also famously said, “I love red so much that I almost want to paint everything red.”
Leonardo Drew’s large-scale, wall-mounted sculptures and installations are built from everyday materials like iron, paper, cotton, and wood that he intentionally manipulates through oxidation, burning, and weathering. Drew’s painted wood construction Number 175T evokes associations of both the natural and urban landscape: the central, white form resembles a tree with sprawling roots—or perhaps inverted, growing upside down—while the tightly configured grid recalls a topographic view of a city, perhaps a map that reveals a larger vision of the landscape.
Sheldon Museum of Art recently purchased Survival Suite, a portfolio of four lithographs by Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, an enrolled Squelix’u (Salish) member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribes in the US state of Montana. The prints are titled Wisdom/Knowledge, Humor, Tribe/Community, and Nature/Medicine. They are named for the Native American social models that have imbued indigenous people with resilience in the face of repeated trauma, most notably the forced relocation and mass genocide brought about by the United States’ program of westward expansion from the mid-nineteenth century onward.
Now active in New Mexico, Smith first came to national prominence during the 1970s. She is best known for her paintings and prints that engage with contemporary tribal politics, human rights, and environmental issues. Because of the personal nature of many of her works, descriptions of Smith often reduce her to an artist whose work solely engages with Native American themes. Her contributions to American modernism, best seen in Tribe/ Community and her use of the rabbit, have often been overlooked. Much of the literature on Smith highlights the importance of this small mammal as a trickster animal for many Native Americans, including Muscogee and Winnebago tribes. Generally considered a lighthearted character, the Rabbit Trickster features in many children’s stories and is prone to some inappropriate behavior, such as gluttony, carelessness, and an overinflated ego. Discussions of Smith’s work tend to gloss over the fact that she also is working within a long tradition of artists who have included the rabbit in their work, most notably Joseph Beuys’s dead hare in How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare (1965) and Jeff Koons’s highly reflective stainless steel Rabbit (1986), a multiple of which one in the edition of three recently caused a sensation at auction.
In Tribe/Community, Smith skillfully merges these two traditions (modernism and rabbits) in her anthropomorphic rabbit. Standing boldly on its two hind legs and with its front limbs akimbo, Smith’s rabbit cuts a defiant figure, its determination radiating outward in red through a series of quickly drawn strokes of a greasy lithographic crayon. The rabbit is superimposed on four identical Latin cross church floorplans, symbols of the European Christocentric world view that was used to justify Manifest Destiny’s systematic persecution of indigenous populations. In this print, the rabbit is a potent figure of resistance, grit, and resilience, themes that Smith addresses in the rest of the portfolio.
Smith's Survival Suite is a recent acquisition featured in the 2020 exhibition Person of Interest.