Technique and process in the papers of David Smith

  • Mulholland, Richard
  • Hermens, Erma
  • Townsend, Joyce H.
Publication date
January 2008

Abstract

For the American sculptor, David Smith (1906–1965), drawing was a language to replace words. It was the subconscious immediacy of drawing that allowed formal concepts to take shape during the laborious process of welding steel. In the 1950s, Smith’s sculptural output increased dramatically in both scale and quantity. At the same time, his drawings acquired a separate identity, largely independent of his sculpture. However, it appears that Smith in advocating, conceptually at least, the fusion of painting and sculpture, also made discreet reference to his sculptural work via techniques and materials employed in drawing. Smith’s interest in the addition of textural elements to his drawing media for example,provides substantial evidence of his...

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