Joseph Cornell (1903-1972)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
American sculptor Joseph Cornell was born in 1903 in Nyack, New York and studied at the Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. He moved to Flushing, New York in 1929 where, without any formal training, he began painting and making assemblages and later experimented with film making. Cornell had his first exhibition in New York in 1932. He is best known for his enclosed constructions, assemblages of various objects and clippings, irrationally juxtaposed within picture-frame boxes. These works are characterized by a still, remote, and nostalgic quality, with their allusions to both geographical and temporal distances achieved through historical references and through cosmological elements. The world of Cornell's constructions are remarkably distant and hermetic in visual terms as well; objects are placed behind glass panes and are often individually encased or reflected with the use of mirrors. They have been referred to as "star maps of a private universe." 

Joseph Cornell's mysterious conglomerations of images and objects contained within the framework of a shallow box present any number of associations that almost seem to be illustrations of a dream. In making his sculptures, Cornell relied on the fact that everyone brings to objects certain associations that are inescapable, and when these objects themselves seem to have a history and a certain relation to those around them, the impact can be startling and even unnerving in its uncanny, déjà-vu directness.

Adapted from
  • Charles Wylie, "From Object to Image: Sculpture, Installation, Media," in Fast forward: contemporary collections for the Dallas Museum of Art, eds. María de Corral and John R. Lane (Dallas Museum of Art ; New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2007), 223-227.
  • DMA unpublished material.

NOTES
  • DMA unpublished material = "Modern American Artists," p. 3. In education files. 

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AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS  

IMAGE ASSETS 

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES (digitized/non-digitized)

FUN FACTS 

TEACHING IDEAS 

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General Description
American sculptor Joseph Cornell was born in 1903 in Nyack, New York and studied at the Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. He moved to Flushing, New York in 1929 where, without any formal training, he began painting and making assemblages and later experimented with film making. Cornell had his first exhibition in New York in 1932. He is best known for his enclosed constructions, assemblages of various objects and clippings, irrationally juxtaposed within picture-frame boxes. These works are characterized by a still, remote, and nostalgic quality, with their allusions to both geographical and temporal distances achieved through historical references and through cosmological elements. The world of Cornell's constructions are remarkably distant and hermetic in visual terms as well; objects are placed behind glass panes and are often individually encased or reflected with the use of mirrors. They have been referred to as "star maps of a private universe." 

Joseph Cornell's mysterious conglomerations of images and objects contained within the framework of a shallow box present any number of associations that almost seem to be illustrations of a dream. In making his sculptures, Cornell relied on the fact that everyone brings to objects certain associations that are inescapable, and when these objects themselves seem to have a history and a certain relation to those around them, the impact can be startling and even unnerving in its uncanny, déjà-vu directness.

Adapted from
  • Charles Wylie, "From Object to Image: Sculpture, Installation, Media," in Fast forward: contemporary collections for the Dallas Museum of Art, eds. María de Corral and John R. Lane (Dallas Museum of Art ; New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2007), 223-227.
  • DMA unpublished material.

Fun Facts
 
Archival Resources
(digitized/non-digitized)
Web Resources
 

Notes

  • DMA unpublished material = "Modern American Artists," p. 3. In education files. 

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2311
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*Contemporary Art
New York (New York/United States): TGN: 7007567
boxes (containers): AAT: 300045643
assemblages (sculpture): AAT: 300047194
Cornell_Joseph: ULAN: 500003169
assemblage artists: AAT: 300386233
source file
artists_and_designers-0194.xml.nores