Aerial Evergreen
Date2008
Maker
Jessica Jackson Hutchins
American, born 1971
Label TextJessica Jackson Hutchins sculpts various fragments of landscapes and reminds us that our sense of place is also defined by community. Through organic forms and her use of clay as sculptural material, Hutchins expresses her intimacy with nature—at times her sculptures even become vessels to hold nature, as in Bowl for Pomegranate Seeds and Ash Cup. In Angel’s Rest, she alludes to a scenic bluff on the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon where she has hiked. Hutchins’ images are intimate and subtle, and reveal how her work is connected to everyday experience. In a prior installation of these sculptures, Hutchins hosted a dinner party in which food was served on these abstracted landscapes and guests ate together around the table. Here, Hutchins chose to continue to exhibit these works on a table—an important conceptual gesture that reminds us of a communal gathering.
Object number2011.17.a
ProvenanceThe artist; [Laurel Gitlen Gallery, New York]; purchased from gallery by the Seattle Art Museum, 2011
Photo CreditPhoto: Elizabeth Mann
Exhibition HistoryNew York, New York, Laurel Gitlen Gallery, Are You with Me?, January 4 – February 8, 2009 (four of the six sculptures, not including Dandelion Pass and Angels Rest)
Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Reclaimed: Nature and Place through Contemporary Eyes, June 30 – September 11, 2011Credit LineHoward Kottler Endowment for Ceramic Art and Modern Art Acquisition Fund
Dimensions14 x 18 x 14 in. (35.6 x 45.7 x 35.6 cm)
MediumCeramic
William Henry Jackson
ca. late 1870s-early 1880s
Object number: 86.7