Tanktotem I

Tanktotem I

David SmithWW-1952-115771
1952·Steel·228 × 99 × 42 cm (89 3/4 × 39 × 16 1/2 in.)

<p>For David Smith, steel was the quintessential modern material of the 1950s—a symbol of progress, movement, power, destruction, and brutality. Following the Cubist model, Smith combined various industrial pieces, often discarded scraps, into an open network of abstract forms. In the early 1950s, he began conceiving his sculptures as parts of titled groups, which allowed him to explore multiple permutations of a single theme. <em>Tanktotem</em> is a series in which Smith incorporated boiler parts and cylindrical steel tank parts that he purchased from a catalog. With their characteristic upright forms, these works straddle the boundary between the human figure and abstract sign.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1952
Medium
Steel
Dimensions
228 × 99 × 42 cm (89 3/4 × 39 × 16 1/2 in.)

Artist

David Smith
David Smith

Mixed Media

David Smith was an American artist and sculptor of the Abstract Expressionist movement. Smith is best known for his large, geometric sculptures formed from welded steel. As with other American Abstract Expressionists, including his friend, Jackson Pollock, Smith’s oeuvre was influenced by the Surrealist art movement.

Decatur, IN, United States

Full artist profile →

More

More by David Smith

View all →
Wagon II

Wagon II

1964 · Steel

WW-1964-223338
Cubi XIX

Cubi XIX

1964 · Stainless steel

WW-1964-217883
Painting 1964

Painting 1964

1964 · Oil paint on canvas on plywood

WW-1964-217921
Untitled (Study for Cubi VII)

Untitled (Study for Cubi VII)

1963 · Black, blue and ochre spray enamel with black pastel and white oil paint on cream laid paper

WW-1963-138658
Cubi VII

Cubi VII

1963 · Stainless steel

WW-1963-123583
Zig VII

Zig VII

1963 · Painted steel

WW-1963-M070098

Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1952
Medium
Steel
Dimensions
228 × 99 × 42 cm (89 3/4 × 39 × 16 1/2 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1952-115771

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

David Smith

David Smith

Mixed Media

View artist profile →