Objects

Barbara Hepworth: Select Sculptures, 1944–1973.

by Amy Collier

Winged Figure II, 1957 (Bronze with plaster and wire) / Photo © Amy Collier
Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, San Antonio
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I have long admired the work of British sculptor Barbara Hepworth (1903–1975), Britain’s highly regarded female modern artist. I am fortunate to live near a modern art museum in my neighborhood with a handful of Hepworth sculptures from their permanent collection on display. Additionally, there is an outdoor Hepworth sculpture group installed on the campus of a nearby university as well. However, unfortunately at the time I took the photo there was construction on campus so I was not able to get a full clean shot… another day.

I would love to pay a visit to the Tate’s Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden, St. Ives—what was formerly Hepworth’s home and studio in Cornwall from 1949 until her death in 1975; and the Hepworth Wakefield—a museum recently opened in 2011 in Yorkshire where Hepworth was born.

To see many more sculptures from Hepworth’s prolific art career visit barbarahepworth.org.uk. There you can also learn a great deal about her life and work.

Hollow Form with Strings, 1944 (Wood with string and paint) / Photo © Amy Collier
Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, San Antonio

Cantate Domino, 1958 (Bronze) / Photo © Amy Collier
(BH 244, edition of 6), casts at Tate; Middelheimpark, Antwerp; Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, San Antonio; Museu de Arte Moderna, São Paulo

barbarahepworth.org.uk

Cantate Domino, 1958 (Bronze), photographed with Hepworth at Trewyn / Photo © Hepworth Estate

barbarahepworth.org.uk

Conversation with Magic Stones, 1973 (Bronze) / Photo © Amy Collier
(BH 567, edition of 3 groups plus 4 sets of individual sculptures), complete groups at Tate (Barbara Hepworth Museum, St Ives); Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas

barbarahepworth.org.uk

Winged Figure II, 1957 (Bronze with plaster and wire) / Photo © Amy Collier
Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, San Antonio

Duchamp, Marcel – Rotoreliefs (Optical Disks): No. 1-12, 1935
Printed color offset lithograph, double-sided sheet diameter: 7-7/8 in. (20 cm)
Gift of Rose Fried Gallery

Image © Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College
www.wellesley.edu/davismuseum
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The sheer beauty of art and science colliding, a selection images of French-American artist Marcel Duchamp’s Rotorelief optical discs. Duchamp (1876–1968) created and had professionally printed a set of twelve designs in 1935 following his original visual optics experiments in the 1920s which were painted on flat cardboard circles.

Images above and below of the 1935 discs are from the Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College. You can see the full set here. The graphic qualities are lovely but, of course static images of the discs are ultimately void of meaning without context. The discs ultimately must be viewed in motion to be understood so below I am including a video of the disc Lanterne Chinoise. (I recommend turning the audio off.) Duchamp intended the individual discs to be viewed on a turntable, mounted on the wall. Additionally, here is a link to Duchamp’s fascinating 1926 experimental optic film—Anémic Cinéma. Employing the original painted cardboard designs, the film was created by Duchamp in Man Ray’s studio with the assistance of cinematographer Marc Allégret.

Rotorelief (Duchamp) – “Lanterne Chinoise” (drehende Kreise)

The optical science at play:

Although Italian scientists (unaware of Duchamp’s work) found and named this particular form of illusion as “the stereo-kinetic effect” in 1924, Duchamp apparently discovered this perceptual phenomenon independently in the early 1920s and completed his first set of discs in 1923. Duchamp recognized that by spinning designs composed as sets of eccentric but concentric circles, a viewer would see the resulting pattern as a three dimensional form even through one eye alone, without the supposedly necessary benefit of stereoscopy! By the 1930s, Duchamp had constructed from his experiments a wonderfully whimsical set of 12 spinning images—from a goldfish in a bowl, to the eclipsed sun seen through a tube, to a cocktail glass, to a light bulb—in order to emphasize his discovery of these three-dimensional effects. (Ironically, as another example of harmful separation between truly unified aspects of art and science, art museums almost invariably exhibit these discs as framed, static objects on a wall—whereas they have no meaning, either artistic or scientific, unless they spin. We are constrained to present a similarly static image in this printed magazine, but readers can observe the discs in their proper motion at artscienceresearchlab.org.

Duchamp knew what he had done, and he explicitly regarded the Rotoreliefs as a contribution to science. He wrote to Katherine Dreier in 1935: “I showed it to scientists (optical people) and they say it is a new form, unknown before, of producing the illusion of volume or relief. … That serious side of the play toy is very interesting.” Moreover, Duchamp took great pleasure in the efforts of a professor who wished to use his Rotorelief discs to retrain the three-dimensional insights of soldiers who had lost one eye in the First World War. [At a recent talk, one of us (R.R.S.) demonstrated the rotating discs to a physics professor, blind in one eye for more than a decade, who almost wept for joy at his first sight of three dimensions in so many years]. Duchamp also understood the general basis of his illusion when he wrote in a letter: “I only had to use two circumferences—eccentric—and make them turn on a third center.”

–Rhonda Roland Shearer & Stephen Jay Gould, Of Two Minds and One Nature

Image © Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College
www.wellesley.edu/davismuseum

Image © Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College
www.wellesley.edu/davismuseum

Image © Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College
www.wellesley.edu/davismuseum

Image © Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College
www.wellesley.edu/davismuseum

Image © Davis Museum and Cultural Center, Wellesley College
www.wellesley.edu/davismuseum