Sixties Surreal

2025

A textured beige square panel with a small pink dot and a white ball hanging by two wires.

Laura Phipps: I think that this work can be interpreted as or seen as having these bodily features, feeling like it is protruding from the surface in this sort of organic way, but it also has these mechanical features.

Narrator: Laura Phipps is an Associate Curator at the Whitney. 

Laura Phipps: C-Clamp Blues is a work made by Eva Hesse in 1965 and it was one of fourteen wall works that she made while living in an abandoned factory in Germany and this setting really influenced her use of materials like metal and particle board and joint compound. There's a quality of play or even humor in Hess's work in the way that she's combining the materials. This really rough-hewn, built-up compound that has references to concrete or to building materials, but placed delicately on top is a found object that feels both completely unmoored from its surface, but also entirely in place, especially in relationship to the smooth globe like object that protrudes from the work.

Narrator: A lot of Hesse’s peers had similar experimental impulses. 

Laura Phipps: In the early to mid 1960s, these ideas of the erotic of bodily suggestion and minimalist form or spare geometric shapes all within the same works of art, the use of unconventional materials—some of which were very new to the market like fiberglass or latex and plaster—was seen in a number of artist studios and within their works around this time.

These gestures were also occurring on the West Coast, an impulse in the Bay Area became known as Funk, a label that was contested by artists from the very beginning. But the works in the West Coast that were also approaching the body and abstraction were maybe more straightforwardly looking at orifices and protrusions of the body.


Eva Hesse, C-Clamp Blues, 1965. Painted concretion, metal wire, bolt and painted plastic ball, 25 5/8 x 21 5/8 x 1 1/2 in. (65.1 x 54.9 x 3.8 cm). Collection of Gail and Tony Ganz. Los Angeles, CA. © The Estate of Eva Hesse. Image courtesy Hauser & Wirth

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