Login
My List - 0
Help
Search
Search Images
About
Keyword
Browse
Combined
Highlights
Search History
All Catalogs
Search:
Artist Browse
Title Browse
Subject Browse
Object Type Browse
Owner Browse
Refine Search
> You are only searching:
Art Inventories
More Smithsonian Searches
Who else has...
Newton, Gordon,
Abstract -- Geometric
Allegory -- Place
Outdoor Sculpture -- Michigan -- West Bloomfield
Sculpture
Daytona Beach, (sculpture).
Artist:
Newton, Gordon, 1948- , sculptor.
Title:
Daytona Beach, (sculpture).
Dates:
1972.
Medium:
Logs, charcoal, tape, paraffin and plaster.
Description:
"This deliberately 'unbeautiful' construction of 'unappealing' textures suggesting dirt, dampness, mold is surrounded by isolated red, green, blue, yellow and black shapes scattered randomly onto a faded orange ground, and white painted frame."
Subject:
Abstract -- Geometric
Allegory -- Place -- Daytona Beach
Object Type:
Outdoor Sculpture -- Michigan -- West Bloomfield
Sculpture
Owner:
Located at Old Orchard Shopping Center, Orchard Lake & Maple Roads, West Bloomfield, Michigan
Lent by Silverman, Gilbert & Lila, Detroit, Michigan
References:
Nawrocki, Dennis Alan, "Art in Detroit Public Places," Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1980, pg. 143.
Illustration:
Nawrocki, Dennis Alan, "Art in Detroit Public Places," Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1980, pg. 143.
Note:
The information provided about this artwork was compiled as part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture database, designed to provide descriptive and location information on artworks by American artists in public and private collections worldwide.
Repository:
Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture, Smithsonian American Art Museum, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 970, Washington, D.C. 20013-7012
Control Number:
IAS 87840048
Copy/Holding information
Smithsonian AmericanArt Museum
Control Number
Inventory of American Sculpture
87840048
Add Copy to MyList
Format:
HTML
Plain text
Delimited
Subject:
Email to:
Horizon Information Portal 3.0
About
| © 2020 Smithsonian |
Terms of Use
|
Privacy
|
Contact