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Proctor Silex (Evidence and Presence)

Artist/Maker (American, b. 1955)
Date1989
MediumReassembled steam iron, plastic, rubber, wood, steel and scorched canvas
DimensionsOverall (figure): 28 × 4 × 32 in. (71.1 × 10.2 × 81.3 cm)
Overall (canvas): 72 × 72 in. (182.9 × 182.9 cm)
Overall (wooden base): 48 × 11 × 32 in. (121.9 × 27.9 × 81.3 cm)
Credit LineRuth C. Roush Contemporary Art Fund
Object number1991.19A-C
Status
Not on view
Copyright© Willie ColeMore Information
Born in Somerville, New Jersey, Willie Cole attended art school in Boston and at the School of Visual Arts and the Art Students League in New York. An extraordinarily inventive sculptor, conceptual artist, and printmaker, Cole transforms discarded mass-produced objects-irons, hair dryers, bicycle parts, high-heeled shoes-into visually moving works of art that incorporate symbols of power, evoke memory, and relate to his own personal experiences.

As a young man, Cole repaired irons for female relatives who worked as housekeepers. In 1989, the year the AMAM assemblage was made, he began to incorporate steam irons into his work, both as found objects and as mark-making tools. In Proctor Silex (Evidence and Presence), Cole dissects and transforms a steam iron into a spirit mask, evokes a slave ship by incorporating an ironing board, and suspends a canvas scorched with the patterns created by the hot face of the iron. Hinting at a range of possible meanings, Cole's symbolically infused objects pay homage to the formal qualities of traditional African sculpture and the spiritual worlds they evoke.

Over the next decade, Cole's steam irons became a personal iconography-even "a personal brand," as he himself called them-that he explored in an ever-broader range of media and in which he even occasionally incorporated his own image. The AMAM also owns Cole's triptych Man, Spirit, and Mask, made in 1999, which consists of three large prints that refer to the "scarification" process of the artist's face and transformation of an iron into a mask. Using a Proctor Silex iron, Cole branded or "scarified" an image of his face through a photo-etching plate that was hand-colored and embossed. The artist's inventive and rich interweaving of metaphor nimbly addresses themes of religious ritual, domestic labor, and his own personal appropriation and creation of Africanized forms.
Exhibition History
Social Studies: 4 + 4 Young Americans
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (October 26, 1990 - January 13, 1991 )
Modern Art: Notable Works from the Allen Memorial Art Museum
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 14, 1992 - February 23, 1992 )
African American Artists: Selections from the Permanent Collection
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 16, 1999 - March 21, 1999 )
From Modernism to the Contemporary, 1958-1999
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 21, 2003 - September 9, 2003 )
Portraits of the Black Experience
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 1, 2005 - October 15, 2006 )
From Africa to America
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 24, 2007 - July 29, 2008 )
From Then to Now: Masterworks of Contemporary African-American Art
  • Museum of Contemporary Art, Cleveland (January 29, 2010 - May 9, 2010 )
Religion, Ritual, and Performance in Modern and Contemporary Art
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 28, 2012 - May 26, 2013 )
Time Well Spent: Art and Temporality
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (July 26, 2016 - December 23, 2016 )
Afterlives of the Black Atlantic
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 20, 2019 - May 24, 2020 )
Collections
  • Modern & Contemporary