2011.35, Paul Lee, Untitled (triple negative orange purple green)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Paul Lee often incorporates seemingly banal found objects as primary materials to create modest sculptures with layered, enigmatic meanings. Using a few humble ingredients, Lee has brought a committed level of inventiveness to a practice in which the artist struggles to translate what he describes as "my personal feelings and my knowledge of my surroundings into a visual language for others to decode." Lee has also referred to his practice as a struggle between seeing and knowing. Perhaps for this reason—and our own struggle to assimilate the idea of the bath towel as art object—Lee seems to have found his most poetic subject in this form. At once anonymous and personal, universal and intimate, the towel is emblematic of hygiene, comfort, and relaxation, but equally denotes vulnerability and exposure.

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, 159.

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

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Apply to objects where number equals 2011.35

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General Description
 
Paul Lee often incorporates seemingly banal found objects as primary materials to create modest sculptures with layered, enigmatic meanings. Using a few humble ingredients, Lee has brought a committed level of inventiveness to a practice in which the artist struggles to translate what he describes as "my personal feelings and my knowledge of my surroundings into a visual language for others to decode." Lee has also referred to his practice as a struggle between seeing and knowing. Perhaps for this reason—and our own struggle to assimilate the idea of the bath towel as art object—Lee seems to have found his most poetic subject in this form. At once anonymous and personal, universal and intimate, the towel is emblematic of hygiene, comfort, and relaxation, but equally denotes vulnerability and exposure.

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, 159.

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
2011.35
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
@Bowling
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
%Archived
*Contemporary Art
%TMS pending
yellow (color): AAT: 300127794
objects: AAT: 300312158
found objects: AAT: 300047210
purple (color): AAT: 300130257
bath towels: AAT: 300216634
grids (layout features): AAT: 300200010
source file
object_notes_2_a-0337.xml.nores