Steel rod and wire, wood, rattan, and leather
Puryear’s skill as a sculptor is grounded in experiential training. After attending Catholic University in his native city of Washington, DC, he spent much of the 1960s in Sierra Leone and Scandinavia, where he learned various woodworking techniques from local artisans. Wood remained Puryear’s primary material after he returned to the United States. Despite the dominant influence of Minimalism, the artist quickly realized his need to remain engaged with his materials and with the physical process of making objects. By 1984, when Puryear made Greed’s Trophy, he had established a reputation as a leading sculptor of the post-Minimalist generation.
Around this time, Puryear began to introduce wire, wire mesh, and tar into his work. Greed’s Trophy is his first wall sculpture made of wire—an element that possesses the ability to convey volume while remaining open and porous; Puryear later described his use of wire mesh as “mediating between a feeling of massiveness and fragility to reach a point of extreme vulnerability.” The quiet expressiveness and suggestive titles of Puryear’s sculptures open them up to metaphorical interpretations: Greed’s Trophy resembles a cage or an animal trap, perhaps hinting that greed can be an emotional and psychological snare.
MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art, New York (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019)
Gallery label from Artist’s Choice: Arthur Jafa—Less Is Morbid , November 19, 2025–July 5, 2026
In the mid-1960s, Puryear learned practical woodworking in both Sierra Leone and Sweden. The wire and the cage-like shape of this sculpture resemble a hunter's trap or a fisherman's basket, although the work was not modeled on any one object’s design. While Puryear’s artistic process takes cues from utilitarian items, Jafa has observed that “there’s nothing accidental or unauthored about Puryear’s pieces.”
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Arthur Jafa—Less Is Morbid
1 NorthOriginally from Tupelo, Mississippi, and trained as an architect and cinematographer, he has become well-known for his collages, montages, assemblages, and installations—combining images imbued with what he calls “affective capacity,” or the emotional power of association.
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