Body Centered Cubic

Name/Title

Body Centered Cubic

Entry/Object ID

2009.34.2

Artwork Details

Medium

Gold and iron wire and fused glass

Category

American Art, 1945 to Today

Acquisition

Accession

2009.34

Source or Donor

The Falkenstein Foundation

Acquisition Method

Gift

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum, gift of The Falkenstein Foundation

Notes

Crocker Art Museum, gift of The Falkenstein Foundation

Made/Created

Artist

Claire Falkenstein

Date made

circa 1960

Time Period

20th Century

Place

Location

America, North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-California Artists

Dimensions

Height

29 in

Width

29 in

Depth

29 in

Location

Category

Display

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Gold and iron wire and fused glass

General Notes

Note

Info Page Comments: Object needs to be measured The Falkenstein Foundation's inventory # C-5340 S158

Note Type

Historical Note

Note

Claire Falkenstein began her career at the center of San Francisco's art scene. She was a painter and sculptor engaged with Pacific Coast Surrealism, and a respected instructor at the California School of Fine Arts from 1947-49. She moved to Paris in 1950 and continued her sculpture there on a smaller scale by making art jewelry. She mastered new techniques and forms, and increasingly used wire. By 1953, she had taken wire to unprecedented levels, constructing larger, complex nettings of filament, soldered wherever necessary. Her forms were open work pods or, in this instance, cubes. Falkenstein offered a radical solution to sculpture and space by manipulating material in such an original manner. Her next major breakthrough came with the embedding of glass pieces in her lattices. At first these were wedged into place, wrapped by the wire, and held by pressure alone. In 1954, she learned kiln and torch techniques that allowed her to address the different melting points of her materials. Fragments of colored glass could be slumped amid the filaments, often fully encasing them. Further defining the fabric of space, glass also added a new sensuousness to the work. With her nontraditional materials, organic forms, and innovative processes, Falkenstein's aesthetic fit nicely with Art Informel, a movement by the art critic Michel Tapie in his book "Un Art Autre" (1952). Tapie's support cemented Falkenstein's reputation abroad. In 1962, she left Europe to continue her career in Los Angeles, and by the 1970s, she had executed numerous commissions for monumental works.