PAST EXHIBITION
Seymour Lipton: Metal
March 17, 2008—May 20, 2008
Throughout his prolific fifty-year career, sculptor Seymour Lipton
devoted his art to exploring the depths of human existence and
experience. From his early use of wood to his later preference for
metal, Lipton represented the social upheaval that marked the decades
surrounding the Great Depression and World War II in works of sculpture
that reveal a fundamental understanding of the complexities of
anatomical and natural forms. By adding to, eliminating or otherwise
altering the figure of a once-identifiable object, Lipton transformed
his original model into an expression of the common anguish and
uncertainty of his time. Whether depicting the tragic horrors of World
War II, articulating a fear of the rising power of technology, or
empathizing with the condition of the average laborer, this self-taught
artist produced works that were firmly rooted in their historical
moment.
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