Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Solids

Boston & Sandwich Glass Company
Pomade with Cover
ca. 1850
pressed glass
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia


Johann Friedrich Ardin
Elector Johann Wilhelm of the Palatinate
ca. 1708
enamel on copper in frame of silver, brass and glass
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich

Anonymous American Manufacturer
Vase
(issued for the centennial of the American Revolution)
1876
pressed glass
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Charles Robert Ashbee
Brooch
ca. 1900
silver, enameled copper, amethyst
Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington

Anonymous Chinese Carver
Lidded Vase with Ring Handles
ca. 1900-1950
rock crystal
Asian Art Museum, San Francisco

Giacomo Balla
Futurist Flower
ca. 1918-25
(reconstructed in 1968)
painted wood
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Josef Hoffmann
Fruit Bowl
1917
silver
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum

Louise Bourgeois
The Blind leading the Blind
1947-49
painted wood
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Claire Falkenstein
Set Structure with Cylinders
1944
stained and lacquered poplar wood
Guggenheim Museum, New York

Hans Arp (Jean Arp)
Bust of an Elf
1949
bronze
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Barbara Hepworth
Large and Small Forms
1963
slate on painted wood base
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

Claes Oldenburg
Soft Bathtub (Model) - Ghost Version
1966
painted canvas, plaster, foam, wood and metal
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC

David Nash
Rostrum with Bonks
1971
pine, ash, horse chestnut and birchwood
Tate Modern, London

Bronwyn Oliver
Mantle
1985
painted fiberglass
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Carol Cohen
White Fish II
1992
painted glass on wood base
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Hal Metlitzky
Cyclone
2012
exotic woods
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC

Carole Brendan Hetzel
Basket no. 232
2005
plant fibers, steel, pigment
Minneapolis Institute of Art

What man is he that yearneth
    For length unmeasured of days?
Folly mine eye discerneth
    Encompassing all his ways.
For years over-running the measure
    Shall change thee in evil wise:
Grief draweth nigh thee; and pleasure,
    Behold, it is hid from thine eyes.
    This to their wage have they
    Which outlive their day.
And He that looseth from labour
    Doth one with other befriend,
    Whom bride nor bridesmen attend,
Song, nor sound of the tabor,
    Death, that maketh an end.

Thy portion esteem I highest,
    Who wast not ever begot;
Thine next, being born who diest
    And straightway again art not.
With follies light as the feather
    Doth Youth to man befall;
Then evils gather together,
    There wants not one of them all 
    Wrath, envy, discord, strife,
    The sword that seeketh life. 
And sealing the sum of trouble
    Doth tottering Age draw nigh,
    Whom friends and kinsfolk fly,
Age, upon whom redouble
    All sorrows under the sky. 

This man, as me, even so,
Have the evil days overtaken;
And like as a cape sea-shaken
With tempest at earth's last verges
And shock of all winds that blow,
His head the seas of woe,
The thunders of awful surges
Ruining overflow;
Blown from the fall of even,
    Blown from the dayspring forth,
Blown from the noon in heaven,
    Blown from night and the North.

– Sophocles, from Oedipus Coloneus, translated by A.E. Housman (before 1936)