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Untitled (Sequestered Bower)

Untitled (Sequestered Bower)

Joseph CornellWW-1943-031367
1943·box construction with amber glass·39.4 × 30.8 × 12.4 cm (15 1/2 × 12 1/8 × 4 7/8 in.)

<p>The title <em>Sequestered Bower</em> commonly attributed to this work seems to derive from Cornell’s humorous description of one of his Owl Boxes, in a diary note of July 10, 1948, as “Large SEQUESTERED BOWER “ (Cornell Papers, AAA, reel 1058; cited in Dawn Ades, “The Transcendental Surrealism of Joseph Cornell,” in New York 1980–82, p. 41). The “habitat” of bark and dried moss further links this box to Cornell‘s Owl Boxes (<a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/99760"><em>Untitled (Large Owl)</em></a>and <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/99761"><em>Untitled (Lighted Owl)</em></a>) and suggests that it was made during the same period. The substitution of a blonde, naked, female plastic doll with painted red lips for the owl, whose habitat she occupies, is startling. The box is disturbing on several levels. The contrast between the owl in its natural habitat and the doll/woman, whose appearance is as emphatically artificial as her setting is unnatural, produces an unusually jarring effect. Is she to be understood as displacing the owl or as being herself trapped or displaced? The ambiguity of the figure—child‘s toy but also child-woman – is underlined by the mirrors hidden inside the bark and placed at an angle on either side of her, which allow her to be viewed from the side. This mode of presentation is redolent of a strip club rather than of the <em>vanitas</em> or <em>memento mori</em> theme, which often included a mirror and was linked to the Owl Boxes. The idea of the <em>femme-enfant</em> hints at a premature sexuality which inevitably suggests a connection with <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artists/33588">Hans Bellmer</a> and <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artists/40422">Balthus</a>. Cornell would certainly have been aware of Bellmer’s articulated <em>Poupee</em>; photographs of the doll had earlier been reproduced in the French Surrealist journal <em>Minotaure</em> (see Hans Bellmer, “Poupee: Variations sur Ie montage d’une mineure articulee,” <em>Minotaure</em> 6 [Winter 1934–35], pp. 30-31; Bellmer’s <em>Jointure de boules in Minotaure</em> 8 [1936], p. 9; and an untitled photograph by Bellmer of the <em>Poupee</em>, de fenceless, in a wooded environment, which was published adjacent to Cornell ‘s <em>Glass Bell</em>, in <em>Minotaure</em> 10 (1937, p. 34).</p> <p>However, rather than emulate Bellmer’s violent dismantling of the female doll‘s body, Cornell left his doll intact. There is just a suspicion here that Cornell is making a faintly ironic protest at Bellmer’s over-explicit and aggressive works; he was uneasy with the “darker” side of Surrealism, which he saw in the work of Max Ernst and surely in Ballmer. The manicured primness of this doll, with its overlarge head, in its grim setting, provides such a strong contrast to Bellmer’s <em>Poupee</em> that it is hard not to find humor in it.</p> <p>Cornell made two other boxes that offer close comparisons with this one, both of them now in The Museum of Modern Art, New York: <em>Untitled (Bebi Marie)</em>, a larger box of the early 1940s containing a dressed doll immured in an undergrowth of frosted twigs; and <em>Untitled (Melisande)</em> of 1948/50, in which a naked doll appears through a small square opening in a box surrounded by moss or bark, as if buried alive (New York 1980–82, pl. VIII and no. 167, ill., respectively). Cornell supposedly took the doll in <em>Untitled (Bebe: Marie)</em> surreptitiously from his sister Betty (Elizabeth Cornell Benton). These boxes share the disturbing aspect of <em>Untitled (Sequestered Bower</em>, but not the further dimension of humor.</p> <p>Although immured in a forest enclave, the doll in the Bergman box seems an unlikely Rapunzel or Sleeping Beauty. It should be noted, however, that she is the type of doll whose eyes close when she is tilted back ward, and unlikely as it may seem, given the fragility of the other materials in the box, this raises the possibility that this box, too, is a kind of toy: a Sleeping Beauty toy.</p> <p>— Entry, Dawn Ades, <em>Surrealist Art: The Lindy and Edwin Bergman Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago</em>, 1997, p.55-56.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1943
Dimensions
39.4 × 30.8 × 12.4 cm (15 1/2 × 12 1/8 × 4 7/8 in.)

Artist

Joseph Cornell
Joseph Cornell

Printmaking

A leading 20th century American artist and a pioneer of assemblage art, Joseph Cornell has become most well known for his “shadow boxes,” a series of works made from found objects and raw materials that are constructed in such a way as to illustrate narrative surreal, even fantastical scenes. His many variable interests, which ranged from Surrealism to opera to Romantic literature, deeply influenced his work, leading to allegorical and personal memory themed objects. Surrealism specifically was significant to his artistic style, with the method of juxtaposing objects and subjects in surprising combinations featuring heavily across his oeuvre.

Nyack, NY, USA

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Record

Verified by Watts Index
Year
1943
Dimensions
39.4 × 30.8 × 12.4 cm (15 1/2 × 12 1/8 × 4 7/8 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1943-031367

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Joseph Cornell

Joseph Cornell

Printmaking

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