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Collections The Royal Bird

Collections The Royal Bird

Title
The Royal Bird
Artist
David Smith
Date
1947-1948
Dimensions
22.125 × 59.8125 × 8.5 inches
Materials
steel, bronze, stainless steel
Location
On view at the Walker Art Center, Gallery 6

Object Details

Type
Sculpture
Accession Number
1952.4
Edition
stamped into base “David Smith 1948”
Credit Line
Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, 1952

object label David Smith, The Royal Bird (1947-1948) , 1998

David Smith was the first major American artist who challenged the supremacy of the solid figure or object. He replaced the massed form with a more open, physically hollow one by employing principles of direct welding based on joinery and construction, rather than traditional sculptural modes of carving and modeling.

The Royal Bird represents a continuation of Smith’s interests in linear, insect like creatures that began in the mid-1930s. It is based on the skeleton of a prehistoric bird of the Cretaceous period, the Hesperornis regalis (royal evening bird), in the collection of the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The artist created imaginative additions to the skeleton’s form in sketchbook drawings in the 1940s, augmenting the bulbous tail and streamlining the figure to more closely resemble the taut body of a diving bird.

Label text for David Smith, The Royal Bird (1947-1948), from the exhibition Selections from the Permanent Collection, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, December 8, 1996 to April 4, 1999.

Copyright 1998 Walker Art Center