Wandering Rocks (sculpture)

(Redirected from Wandering Rocks (4/5))

Wandering Rocks is a 1967 steel sculpture by Tony Smith, made in an edition of five plus one artist's proof. The Minimalist work comprises five different polyhedral elements painted black.

Wandering Rocks
Edition 2/5 in Milwaukee in 2012
ArtistTony Smith
Year1967
MovementMinimalism

Description

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Edition 4/5 in Washington DC in 2013

The five elements of the sculpture have different size and shapes, based on tetrahedrons and octahedrons, with faceted surfaces painted with a semi-gloss black, and are individually named "Crocus", "Dud", "Shaft", "Slide", and "Smohawk". They measure from 23 in (58 cm) to 45.5 in (116 cm) in height and weigh from 361 lb (164 kg) to 742 lb (337 kg). Several of the editions are exhibited in public, typically installed outdoors on a grassed area. The elements have no fixed positions, and their relative positions and orientations may vary according to the requirements of the specific location, so each installation is different.

The work was first created as a full-size plywood mock-up and then replicated in painted metal. The sculpture may allude to the structure of molecules and crystals, or the Japanese rock garden of Ryōan-ji in Kyoto. As Smith described it: "The Rocks were really conceived as one piece, although I didn't think of them as having a fixed spatial relationship to one another. They did, however, have a temporal sequence. I thought of each piece as having an identity but also as a constituting part of a group. In this group, positions were thought of as changing."[1]

Editions

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Edition 5/5 in the Netherlands in 2008

The work was created in an edition of five, plus one artist's proof:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "WANDERING ROCKS, 1967" Archived 2020-02-23 at the Wayback Machine, tonysmithestate.com
  2. ^ Wandering Rocks Archived 2020-08-09 at the Wayback Machine, Seattle Art Museum
  3. ^ Wandering Rocks: Smohawk, (sculpture) Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System
  4. ^ "WANDERING ROCKS, 1967" 2 Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine, tonysmithestate.com
  5. ^ "The Wondering [sic] Rocks", Smithsonian Institution Research Information System Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Tony Smith, "Wandering Rocks", 1967 Archived 2020-10-31 at the Wayback Machine, National Gallery of Art
  7. ^ "Wandering Rocks, (sculpture)" Archived 2023-07-03 at the Wayback Machine, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System
  8. ^ "Wandering rocks", 1967-1970, Tony Smith (1912-1980) Archived 2020-09-25 at the Wayback Machine, Kröller-Müller Museum