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Title

Sherrie Levine, Newborn (1993), cast crystal, Collection Ralph and Peggy Burnet, Minneapolis

Author

Walker Art Center

Date

1998

Institution Walker Art Center
"Constantin Brancusi held a modernist belief that primal innocence and formal simplicity were linked. From 1909 until 1933 he employed the oval form again and again, captivated by its cosmological flavor--simultaneously suggesting the fragility of an egg and an infant' s head. My favorite of these sculptures is "Newborn", the image of a bawling child, its mouth wide open, suggesting the shock of the birth."--Sherrie Levine

Since the early 1980s, Levine has appropriated--co-opted or reused--famous works of art that she has manipulated and tailored for her artistic purposes. Throughout her career, Levine has created art based on works by prominent 20th-century male artists in order to underscore the relative absence of women in the history of art, particularly the modernist tradition.

Newborn is a rebirth of the Constantin Brancusi sculpture from 1915 with which it shares its title. The smooth egg-shaped form is interrupted only by a stylized ridge and sliced oval plane suggesting the nose and open mouth of a crying infant. Originally displayed on a grand piano, Newborn invokes Marcel Duchamp's "readymades"--prefabricated objects that became works of art because he declared them to be. Levine's cast glass head questions the notion of authenticity and authorship--issues that are constantly raised and challenged throughout the 20th century.

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Type: Commentary, object label
Source: Label text for Sherrie Levine, Newborn (1993), cast crystal, Collection Ralph and Peggy Burnet, Minneapolis, from the exhibition 100 Years of Sculpture: From the Pedestal to the Pixel, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, February 22-May 24, 1998.
Rights: Copyright 1998 Walker Art Center
Added to Site: March 1, 2009