
Box #53
<p>At the beginning of his career, Lucas Samaras—who is often linked with the junk or assemblage artists of the late 1950s and early 1960s—transformed a large number of found and purchased boxes into glittering, fantastic, and often menacing objects. First conceived in 1962, <em>Box #53</em> belongs to a group of custom-made, yarn-covered boxes that incorporate stuffed birds. When the box is opened, a tape measure audibly calculates the height of the nine-inch opening. Inside are four compartments, one of which features a crystal encrusted rock. <em>Box #53</em> embodies a number of implied contrasts: nature’s brilliantly hued birds and the man-made, colored yarn; the container’s relatively modest interior and its flamboyant exterior; and the muted rock and noisy measuring device. “I’m never interested in ambiguous response,” the artist said. “Rather a positive negative . . . touch or not touch, the quality of seducing-repelling.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1966
- Dimensions
- 13 × 15 × 14 in. (33 × 38.1 × 35.6 cm) (closed) 5 × 12 × 9 in. (box itself)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Lucas Samaras
Artist

Sculpture
Lucas Samaras’s oeuvre is united through its consistent focus on the body and psyche, often emphasizing autobiography.
Full artist profile →More
More by Lucas Samaras
Pose 0589 Marie-Josee Kravis
2010 · Inkjet print
Pose 0353 Joel Ehrenkranz
2010 · Inkjet print
Pose 0386 Peter MacGill
2010 · Inkjet print
Pose 0520 Cindy Sherman
2010 · Inkjet print
Pose 0572 Ingrid Sischy
2010 · Inkjet print
Pose 0216 Alex Katz
2009 · Inkjet print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Lucas Samaras
- Year
- 1966
- Dimensions
- 13 × 15 × 14 in. (33 × 38.1 × 35.6 cm) (closed) 5 × 12 × 9 in. (box itself)
- Watts ID
- WW-1966-142241
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





