Shifting Landscapes 

2024

Sculpture of a woman with tree branches for hair, set in a park with trees and buildings in the background.

Alison Saar: I'm Alison Saar. I'm an artist based in Los Angeles, California.

Narrator: This work is part of a series of sculptures evoking winter, spring, summer, and, of course, fall:

Alison Saar: Now that I live in California we don't have many seasons, and I was interested in talking about sort of these phases in a woman's life as seasons.

You know, we're often depicted after fifty as sort of decaying fruit. And so she has pomegranates that have, I say, blown up when they get overripe, they kind of just explode and split open, and she's trying to gather up and save all of these pomegranates. And of course the pomegranate is, you know, thought to be the original apple in the Bible, and its symbolism as fertility. And the woman's ovaries are kind of across the board in many cultures. And so she is desperately trying to cling on to her past.


Alison Saar, Fall, 2011. Bronze, 134 × 48 × 42 in. (340.4 × 121.9 × 106.7 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Robert E. Hayden and Richard Silver 2024.335. © Alison Saar. Courtesy of L.A. Louver, Venice, CA

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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