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Auction archive: Lot number 1022

Lin Emery, (American/Louisiana, b. 1928), "Tree Dance", polished and painted aluminum kinetic sculpture, h. 57", overall h. 75", orb...

Estimate
US$30,000 - US$50,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 1022

Lin Emery, (American/Louisiana, b. 1928), "Tree Dance", polished and painted aluminum kinetic sculpture, h. 57", overall h. 75", orb...

Estimate
US$30,000 - US$50,000
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Lin Emery (American/Louisiana, b. 1928) "Tree Dance" polished and painted aluminum kinetic sculpture small-scale variant of the twenty-one-foot monumental sculpture on the grounds of Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York, presented on a marble-clad square base. h. 57", overall h. 75", orbit dia. 42" Provenance: Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, Louisiana; Private collection. Notes: "Sculpture is living, it's vital, it's changeable. Even when you walk around it, it can be something different. Drawing is a reflection and coordinating eye and hand, but sculpture is your mind and an idea." --Lin Emery An internationally renowned artist, Lin Emery's kinetic sculptures have an elegance of movement which masks an intricate and precise working. The components slowly sway and undulate, pushing and pulling each other in a seemingly endless dance, incorporating the very air around them. Using highly polished aluminum, a material she says is readily available in the port city of New Orleans, Emery creates abstracted forms reminiscent of the natural elements which inspired them. As the artist once admitted, "I love the natural movement of the trees on the levees, the river, and anything in nature." Emery spent her youth traveling between New York and Florida, before enrolling in Columbia University at the precocious age of 16. She traveled from university to university before arriving at the Sorbonne in Paris. While in Paris, she became interested in the work of Russian sculptor Ossip Zadkine (1890-1967) whose studio was near her lodgings. Zadkine accepted her as a student, intrigued by the artistic potential of the curious and creative young woman. Emery eventually returned to New York to study welding at the New York Sculpture Center, one of the few schools to accept women into such a program. Upon completion of her studies, she settled in New Orleans where she turned a portion of her French Quarter apartment into a studio. While her first sculptures were figural, Emery soon found herself more intrigued by the internal structural armatures than the finished work. She began to experiment with abstract welded sculptures, eventually incorporating natural elements - water, magnets, air - into her works to create motion. "Tree Dance" exemplifies Emery's kinetic sculpture. This lot, a variant of the 1990 commission for Hofstra University (made possible by the generous gift of Florence and Robert Kauffman,) is wind activated. With its geometric-shaped red and chrome graduated leaves and winding trunk, it scintillates at the slightest breeze, creating a veritable kaleidoscope of colors and forms. Emery is the recipient of numerous prestigious national and international awards, most significantly the Laszlo Aranyi Award of Honor for Public Art, a National Endowment for the Arts Grant, a Louisiana Women of Achievement Award, the Osawa, Japan Grand Prix for Public Sculpture, and an Opus Award from the Ogden Museum of Southern Art. She has exhibited widely including: the National Academy of Design, New York, New York; the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans, Louisiana; Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, Louisiana; Kouros Gallery, New York, New York; and the Academy of Fine Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
In overall very good condition. Sculpture has been exposed to the elements and there is weathering and rubbing to edges of polished aluminum elements. Some scattered small areas of oxidation, especially at joints. Enamel retains surface integrity and maintains color intensity. Tips of two elements reveal a faint yellowing, possibly indicative of minor repairs. A small inherent anomaly to surface bottom of largest element. Movement of elements is smooth. Base: scattered nicks, chips, scratches and small losses. All consistent with age, material and usage.

Auction archive: Lot number 1022
Auction:
Datum:
9 Dec 2017
Auction house:
New Orleans Auction
333 Saint Joseph Street
New Orleans Lousiana 70130
United States
info@neworleansauction.com
+ 1 (0)504 566 1849
+ 1 (0)504 566 1851
Beschreibung:

Lin Emery (American/Louisiana, b. 1928) "Tree Dance" polished and painted aluminum kinetic sculpture small-scale variant of the twenty-one-foot monumental sculpture on the grounds of Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York, presented on a marble-clad square base. h. 57", overall h. 75", orbit dia. 42" Provenance: Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, Louisiana; Private collection. Notes: "Sculpture is living, it's vital, it's changeable. Even when you walk around it, it can be something different. Drawing is a reflection and coordinating eye and hand, but sculpture is your mind and an idea." --Lin Emery An internationally renowned artist, Lin Emery's kinetic sculptures have an elegance of movement which masks an intricate and precise working. The components slowly sway and undulate, pushing and pulling each other in a seemingly endless dance, incorporating the very air around them. Using highly polished aluminum, a material she says is readily available in the port city of New Orleans, Emery creates abstracted forms reminiscent of the natural elements which inspired them. As the artist once admitted, "I love the natural movement of the trees on the levees, the river, and anything in nature." Emery spent her youth traveling between New York and Florida, before enrolling in Columbia University at the precocious age of 16. She traveled from university to university before arriving at the Sorbonne in Paris. While in Paris, she became interested in the work of Russian sculptor Ossip Zadkine (1890-1967) whose studio was near her lodgings. Zadkine accepted her as a student, intrigued by the artistic potential of the curious and creative young woman. Emery eventually returned to New York to study welding at the New York Sculpture Center, one of the few schools to accept women into such a program. Upon completion of her studies, she settled in New Orleans where she turned a portion of her French Quarter apartment into a studio. While her first sculptures were figural, Emery soon found herself more intrigued by the internal structural armatures than the finished work. She began to experiment with abstract welded sculptures, eventually incorporating natural elements - water, magnets, air - into her works to create motion. "Tree Dance" exemplifies Emery's kinetic sculpture. This lot, a variant of the 1990 commission for Hofstra University (made possible by the generous gift of Florence and Robert Kauffman,) is wind activated. With its geometric-shaped red and chrome graduated leaves and winding trunk, it scintillates at the slightest breeze, creating a veritable kaleidoscope of colors and forms. Emery is the recipient of numerous prestigious national and international awards, most significantly the Laszlo Aranyi Award of Honor for Public Art, a National Endowment for the Arts Grant, a Louisiana Women of Achievement Award, the Osawa, Japan Grand Prix for Public Sculpture, and an Opus Award from the Ogden Museum of Southern Art. She has exhibited widely including: the National Academy of Design, New York, New York; the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans, Louisiana; Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, Louisiana; Kouros Gallery, New York, New York; and the Academy of Fine Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
In overall very good condition. Sculpture has been exposed to the elements and there is weathering and rubbing to edges of polished aluminum elements. Some scattered small areas of oxidation, especially at joints. Enamel retains surface integrity and maintains color intensity. Tips of two elements reveal a faint yellowing, possibly indicative of minor repairs. A small inherent anomaly to surface bottom of largest element. Movement of elements is smooth. Base: scattered nicks, chips, scratches and small losses. All consistent with age, material and usage.

Auction archive: Lot number 1022
Auction:
Datum:
9 Dec 2017
Auction house:
New Orleans Auction
333 Saint Joseph Street
New Orleans Lousiana 70130
United States
info@neworleansauction.com
+ 1 (0)504 566 1849
+ 1 (0)504 566 1851
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