2012.19, Adam McEwen, Untitled, 2011


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Untitled, which hangs on the wall as a painting, appears to be a charcoal-black four-part panel of plywood, its wood grain meticulously detailed in the surface. As in other bodies of work, McEwen illuminates assumptions of reality, both connecting his work with rich artistic tradi­tions such as tromp l’oeil painting, post-painterly abstrac­tion, and Minimalism, and subtly questioning definitions of painting and sculpture as cohesive or independent prac­tices. McEwen’s interest in nomenclature and the power of signification extends into his uses of material. Graphite is just another form of carbon, as is the diamond. Possessing identical chemical elements, graphite and diamond differ only in their crystalline structure, a differentiation both slight and profound in determining their material value. In this way, McEwen’s work poignantly draws attention to our culture’s increasingly passive consumption of information.

Excerpt from
Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018.

NOTES
did not get object file, no provenance, no TMS work, HAB

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General Description
 
Untitled, which hangs on the wall as a painting, appears to be a charcoal-black four-part panel of plywood, its wood grain meticulously detailed in the surface. As in other bodies of work, McEwen illuminates assumptions of reality, both connecting his work with rich artistic tradi­tions such as tromp l’oeil painting, post-painterly abstrac­tion, and Minimalism, and subtly questioning definitions of painting and sculpture as cohesive or independent prac­tices. McEwen’s interest in nomenclature and the power of signification extends into his uses of material. Graphite is just another form of carbon, as is the diamond. Possessing identical chemical elements, graphite and diamond differ only in their crystalline structure, a differentiation both slight and profound in determining their material value. In this way, McEwen’s work poignantly draws attention to our culture’s increasingly passive consumption of information.

Excerpt from
Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
did not get object file, no provenance, no TMS work, HAB

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
2012.19
tags
#draft
#completed
@Bowling
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
painting (visual works): AAT: 300033618
*Contemporary Art
texture (physical attribute): AAT: 300056362
%TMS pending
%Geo pending
black (color): AAT: 300130920
flat (form attributes): AAT: 300010345
panels (surface components): AAT: 300069079
%NotArchived
plywood: AAT: 300012849
information: AAT: 300311832
source file
object_notes_1_b-0089.xml.nores