Four Corners
Artist/Maker
Jackie Winsor
(American, born in Canada, 1941–2024)
Date1972
MediumWood and hemp
DimensionsOverall: 28 7/16 × 50 1/2 × 51 3/4 in., 1500 lb. (72.2 × 128.3 × 131.4 cm, 680.4 kg)
Credit LineGift of Donald Droll in memory of Eva Hesse
Object number1973.87
Status
Not on viewWinsor worked four full days a week for six months to construct Four Corners. At the core of the work is a simple square made of four two-foot-long logs, joined with invisible notches and painstakingly bound together by the artist with thousands of feet of twine that she had unraveled from strands of weathered rope. She wrapped, bound, and knotted the twine around the wooden frame, transforming its geometry into an eccentric form of enormous density, weight, and textural and linear intricacy. The artist believed that the process of making the work—and her role in that process—were critical to its success.
In a New York Times review of Winsor’s 1979 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, Hilton Kramer noted a connection between the artist’s work, “with its attachment to ritual and pre-industrial modes of workmanship,” and what was then called “primitive”:
“There is a yearning in [Winsor’s] work for the kind of meaning that the sculpture in a primitive culture could take for granted: the meaning that derives from a traditionally ordained ritual function. It is in this yearning that the true significance of Jackie Winsor’s sculpture lies—a yearning that attempts to convert the slick forms of Minimalism back into the language of primitive feeling. The poignancy of the work is to be found in the fact that the only rituals available to the sculpture in this task are the rituals of esthetic ratiocination.”
Ellen Johnson, in her catalogue essay for the 1979 exhibition, seemed to concur with Kramer’s response:
“The whole slow process Winsor likened to a ritual long before that reference became so hackneyed. The earlier all-rope series she had executed entirely alone, but the bound-log pieces grew too large and heavy for one person to handle…In the rope pieces Winsor joins hands, as it were, with the original makers and users of the twisted hemp. Such a notion would not, I think, be scoffed at by Winsor inasmuch as she actually invites spectators to bring their own associations to their understanding of her work.”
Exhibition History
In a New York Times review of Winsor’s 1979 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, Hilton Kramer noted a connection between the artist’s work, “with its attachment to ritual and pre-industrial modes of workmanship,” and what was then called “primitive”:
“There is a yearning in [Winsor’s] work for the kind of meaning that the sculpture in a primitive culture could take for granted: the meaning that derives from a traditionally ordained ritual function. It is in this yearning that the true significance of Jackie Winsor’s sculpture lies—a yearning that attempts to convert the slick forms of Minimalism back into the language of primitive feeling. The poignancy of the work is to be found in the fact that the only rituals available to the sculpture in this task are the rituals of esthetic ratiocination.”
Ellen Johnson, in her catalogue essay for the 1979 exhibition, seemed to concur with Kramer’s response:
“The whole slow process Winsor likened to a ritual long before that reference became so hackneyed. The earlier all-rope series she had executed entirely alone, but the bound-log pieces grew too large and heavy for one person to handle…In the rope pieces Winsor joins hands, as it were, with the original makers and users of the twisted hemp. Such a notion would not, I think, be scoffed at by Winsor inasmuch as she actually invites spectators to bring their own associations to their understanding of her work.”
Four Young Americans: Ann McCoy, Mary Miss, Ree Morton, Jacqueline Winsor
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (April 29, 1973 - May 27, 1973 )
Jackie Winsor
- Paula Cooper Gallery, New York (October 20, 1973 - November 14, 1973 )
The Condition of Sculpture
- Hayward Gallery, London (May 29, 1975 - July 13, 1975 )
Jackie Winsor Sculpture
- The Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH (October 2, 1976 - November 21, 1976 )
Jackie Winsor
- Museum of Modern Art, New York (January 19, 1979 - March 13, 1979 )
Primitivism in Twentieth Century Art: Affinity of the Tribal and the Modern
- Museum of Modern Art, New York (September 10, 1984 - January 15, 1985 )
Jackie Winsor
- Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI (November 22, 1991 - January 19, 1992 )
- Newport Harbor Art Museum, Newport Beach, CA (February 2, 1992 - March 29, 1992 )
- North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC (April 25, 1992 - July 12, 1992 )
- Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (August 15, 1992 - November 1, 1992 )
- Akron Art Museum, Akron, OH (November 21, 1992 - January 17, 1993 )
Presence in Minimal and Postminimal Art: Selections from the Permanent Collection
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (April 11, 1995 - May 29, 1995 )
Modern and Contemporary Works from the Permanent Collection
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 21, 1995 - May 27, 1998 )
More Than Minimal: Feminism and Abstraction in the '70s
- Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA (April 20, 1996 - June 30, 1996 )
From Modernism to the Contemporary, 1958-1999
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 21, 2003 - September 9, 2003 )
Going Modern at the Allen: American Painting and Sculpture, 1950-1980
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 16, 2003 - July 27, 2004 )
New Frontiers: American Art Since 1945
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 29, 2006 - December 23, 2006 )
Religion, Ritual, and Performance in Modern and Contemporary Art
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 28, 2012 - May 26, 2013 )
This Is Your Art: The Legacy of Ellen Johnson
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 1, 2017 - May 27, 2018 )
Collections
- Modern & Contemporary
This record was created from historic documentation and may not have been reviewed by a curator. Noticed a mistake? Have some extra information about this object?
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1999
2024
1975
postmarked July 4, 1958