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Man in a Motor Car
Man in a Motor Car
Man in a Motor Car

Man in a Motor Car

Maker (Scottish, 1924 - 2005)
Date1956
MediumCast bronze
DimensionsHeight: 11 5/16 in. (28.8 cm)
Credit LineGift of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley M. Freehling
Copyright© 2019 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / DACS, London
Object number1985.1
Status
Not on view
Description

A great collector of advertisements culled from magazines—particularly colorful American ones for new household products and automobiles—Eduardo Paolozzi famously gave a lecture (the so-called “Bunk lecture”) in 1952, in which he projected a slide show of many of his collages constructed from these printed ads. The lecture consisted of images alone, with no commentary. 

 

In many respects Paolozzi was one of the fathers of Pop Art, at least in Britain.  As well as making paper collages, he would collect junk objects, particularly machine parts, electrical components, and mechanical toys. He then pressed such items into flat strips of soft wax where they would leave an impression before joining together the strips to create sculptures, later cast in bronze. This was the technique used to make Man in a Motorcar. Although the subject of the work is modern, the overall effect is more archaeological, as if the detritus of our present-day culture had been unearthed at a distant point in the future.
Smart Publications:
From Blast to Pop
Figure
Eduardo Luigi Paolozzi
circa 1956
Head (Study for a Paolozzi Poster)
Eduardo Luigi Paolozzi
1955
Des Colonitzadore
Eduardo Arranz-Bravo
1966
Helmet Head No. 1
Henry Moore
1950 (lead original, bronze edition 1960)
Curved Form (Wave II)
Barbara Hepworth
1959
Serene Head (Thea)
Barbara Hepworth
1959
Torso: June of Youth
Leon Underwood
1934 (model), this cast 1958?
Small Sculpture
William Turnbull
1956
Four-Piece Composition
Henry Moore
1934 (reinforced concrete edition); 1962 (bronze edition)