Photo of collection object Untitled #698 (Trying to Fly, Houdini's Chandelier)
Coyne, Petah. Untitled #698 (Trying to Fly, Houdini's Chandelier), 1991. Mixed media, 60 x 36 x 27 in., 10 lb. (152.4 x 91.4 x 68.6 cm, 4.5kg) storage (crate): 78 1/4 × 42 × 42 in. (198.8 × 106.7 × 106.7 cm). Gift of the Rothfeld Family Collection in memory of Harriet Weill Rothfeld , 2008.17.1. © Petah Coyne, Courtesy Galerie Lelong, New York © artist or artist's estate.

Untitled #698 (Trying to Fly, Houdini's Chandelier)

1991

Petah Coyne

American, born 1953

Contemporary Art

Petah Coyne’s fantastical forms, presenting a beauty that slides into the grotesque, allude to death and decay. Her large, arresting sculptures are neither abstraction nor figuration, but exist somewhere be- tween the two. Using a wide range of nontraditional materials including hay, wire, black sand, specially formulated wax, silk flowers, ribbons, artificial birds, earth, hair, and trees, Coyne often veils or covers objects as though they were artifacts frozen in time. Often hanging from the ceiling, her sculptures
project a sense of unease and fragility. Although the materials appear delicate, one senses the weight and density of the works—the gossamer-like Untitled 816 (Dr. Zhivago), for example, weighs three hundred pounds.

Coyne is part of a generation of feminist sculptors who came of age in the late 1980s after Minimalism. Like many of her contemopraries such as Ursula von Rydingsvard, she seeks to integrate themes of nature and the self in her works.
Maker/Artist
Coyne, Petah
Classification
Sculpture
Formatted Medium
Mixed media
Medium
mixed, media
Dimensions
60 x 36 x 27 in., 10 lb. (152.4 x 91.4 x 68.6 cm, 4.5kg) storage (crate): 78 1/4 × 42 × 42 in. (198.8 × 106.7 × 106.7 cm)
Departments
Contemporary Art
Accession Number
2008.17.1
Credit Line
Gift of the Rothfeld Family Collection in memory of Harriet Weill Rothfeld
Exhibitions
Petah Coyne
Rights Statement
© artist or artist's estate
Dominant Colors

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