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Zag negro CC (obra de arte)

Información sobre la obra de arte

Creado
1964 to 1971 (final addition 1977)
Artista
Louise Nevelson
Nacionalidad
Estadounidense (nacido en Ucrania)
Nacimiento/Muerte
1899-1988
Dimensiones
48 x 59 x 9 inches (121.9 x 149.9 x 22.9 centimeters)

Crédito

Adquirido con fondos de la National Endowment for the Arts y la North Carolina State Art Society (legado de Robert F. Phifer)

Número de objeto
G.78.2.2
Cultura
Americana
Clasificación
Escultura
Departamento
Moderno

Key Ideas

  • Artist Louise Nevelson was known for creating unique assemblages. Assemblage is an art form that uses everyday objects and transforms them into something new. 
  • Nevelson used boxes and small found objects to create the sculptures she called Zags. She spray-painted her sculptures one color (usually black). This gave each sculpture a sense of unity even though it was made from many different pieces.
  • Nevelson was one of the most famous women artists of her time. She helped to inspire the feminist art movement. Feminist artists encouraged gender equality in art. 
  • In the 1930s Nevelson worked as an art teacher. She was funded by the Works Progress Administration (WPA). The WPA was a program that helped fund and create millions of American jobs (including art jobs) to help people who lost their jobs during the Great Depression

 

 

 

Más información

Artist Louise Nevelson was inspired by the assemblages of Joseph Cornell. She created unique sculptures that she called Zags by filling boxes with stacked pieces of wood and small trinkets that she had found. She spray painted the Zags a solid color (usually black) to create a feeling of unity. When she was asked about her use of the color black in her sculptures, Nevelson said, “It’s only an assumption of the Western world that it means death. For me it may mean finished, completeness, maybe eternity.” Although Nevelson’s Zags are made up of many separate pieces, the monochromatic color scheme ties the pieces together into a single sculpture. 

Nevelson was one of the most famous women artists in the mid-1900s. She helped pave the way for the feminist art movement. This art movement encouraged women to make art about their experiences. It also created opportunities for women artists. Social and economic factors prevented most women from having successful art careers at the time. 

Throughout her art career, Nevelson studied and worked with famous artists including Hans Hofmann and Diego Rivera. She also taught art as part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), a government program designed to help Americans get jobs during the Great Depression. The WPA funded construction projects like roads and bridges. It also gave funding to visual artists, musicians, actors, and writers. 

tags: forma, patrón, parte/todo, cambio, orden, variación

Recursos adicionales

Recursos para los profesores: 

 

Recursos para los estudiantes:

Imágenes

  • Una colección de seis cajas de madera conectadas, llenas de formas abstractas y hechas con objetos encontrados. Los objetos y las cajas están pintados de negro sólido.

    Zag negro CC

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