Sundial is what Clark called a bicho, or critter—a type of sculpture whose hinged metal sheets can be folded into multiple configurations or flattened to a single plane. Though strictly geometric and carefully structured around several axes, the work becomes elusive and unpredictable once activated. Clark thought that to interact with Sundial was to engage in a process of mutual discovery and transformation through which identity—the participant’s and the work’s—can be radically redefined.

Gallery label from

Sur moderno: Journeys of Abstraction—The Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Gift, October 21, 2019–March 14, 2020

Gallery label from 2006

Sundial belongs to Clark's Animals series, begun in 1960—a group of metal sculptures whose forms can be endlessly modified. The works in this series are flat, curving structures that fold in different ways along a spine–like axis. Capable of many variations in form, they can also be reduced to a flat plane. Sundial was conceived to invite the spectator to modify its foldable geometric shapes.

Provenance

The artist.
[Paulo Kuczynski, São Paulo]
? - 1996, Galeria César Aché, Río de Janeiro (archival code #581).
1996 - 2004, Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, New York and Caracas, purchased through Galeria César Aché.
2004, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, acquired as gift from Patricia Phelps de Cisneros.

Medium Aluminum with gold patina
Dimensions Dimensions variable, approximately 20 7/8 x 23 x 18 1/8" (52.8 x 58.4 x 45.8 cm)
Credit Gift of Patricia Phelps de Cisneros in honor of Rafael Romero
Object number 312.2004
Department Painting & Sculpture

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Lygia Clark

Lygia Clark

Brazilian, 1920–1988 19 works online

The notion that the work of art was more like a body than a discrete object was a radical idea that led many Brazilian artists to embrace the viewer’s subjective experience as the main criterion in art making.

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All works by Lygia Clark →

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