Sixties Surreal

2025

A smooth wooden sculpture shaped like a thick stick tied in a knot, standing on a square base.

Dan Nadel: The Big Change is an improbable object. It seems like a sailor's knot, but made out of wood, which of course is impossible. And Westermann loved those sort of illusions. He loved to play and to delight people both personally—he would often do handstands and walk on his hands and openings and do acrobatic tricks just for fun—but also with his work, by tricking people into thinking one material was another kind of material, or that you could tie a knot out of wood. The object itself, also for the curators, for us, symbolized the many connections that Westermann made across the country that are embodied in this show. Westernmann crisscrossed America from New York to Chicago to northern California to southern California to Texas, meeting with artists, inspiring them. And he was sort of seen by so many of the artists in the show as a distant, benevolent, aesthetic uncle.


H.C. Westermann, The Big Change, 1963. Douglas fir marine plywood, Masonite and ink, 75 3/8 x 20 1/4 x 20 1/4 in (191.5 x 51.4 x 51.4 cm). The Art Institute of Chicago; Gift of the Estate of Alan and Dorothy Press in acknowledgment of their family. © 2025 Dumbarton Arts, LLC / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Image courtesy the Art Institute of Chicago / Art Resource, NY

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