Sixties Surreal

2025

Narrator: This work by Paul Thek is called Untitled from the series Technological Reliquaries, and it’s from 1966. It’s an abstract sculpture just over 2 feet tall and 2 feet wide with a depth of 7 ½ inches that sits on a pedestal. It’s made with wax, paint, polymer resin, nylon monofilament, wire, plaster, plywood, melamine laminate, rhodium-plated bronze, and acrylic. The exterior of the work is a neon yellow-green transparent rectangular acrylic box sealed on top of a white platform with silvery metal strips wrapping horizontally around the top and bottom. It resembles a display case for a medical or anthropological object.  

Inside the box, a cylinder resembling severed flesh oozes a dark gelatinous substance from one end. The cylinder is just under a foot long, and the ooze in the center forms a thick blackish-red puddle. Facing the box’s short side opposite the oozing substance.

Thek has created irregular passages in the rough-cut layers revealing variations that look like bone, connective tissue, and marrow. Facing the box’s long side, the layers wrap around the cylinder creating a smooth surface. The surface of the cylinder is the color of light skin tone with wires that spring from the top like fine hairs, up through the box’s top surface. Although the colors and textures resemble flesh, the shape of the cylinder does not resemble a familiar body part. Instead, it has the inert quality of a pipe fitting or a concrete construction pipe. Thek arranged twisted copper wires seemingly indiscriminately on top of the neon box like fallen or discarded body hair. 

This untitled work is from a group of sculptures that Paul Thek termed Technological Reliquaries, or “meat pieces.” For Thek, this grotesque combination of organic and inorganic forms responded to the carnage of the Vietnam War and expressed his fear that the scientific technology that fueled the war would suppress the human spirit. 

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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