Sixties Surreal

2025

A large, charred, burnt wooden surface with layers of paint, numbers, stars, and abstract shapes partially visible underneath.

Dan Nadel: This is an artwork that you can tell is burnt. 

Narrator: Curator Dan Nadel talks about this work, Untitled (66 Signs of Neon).

Dan Nadel: This sort of burnt crust around the artwork is really a remnant of how it was made. It was made because Noah Purifoy was responding to the 1965 Watts uprising, and his idea was to take what had been destroyed in his community and make something new from it, something that was generative as against the destruction of the time. It's an artwork that is using the tropes and the ideas of collage that we may remember from historic surrealism, but also from other things in this gallery that you see, including Bruce Connor or Wallace Berman ideas of putting divergent things together to make a unified whole and to communicate something larger about what you can do with the things around you. How can we pull things from the city that we live in and make something new, and how can we signal that destruction won't be the end of us?

Narrator: The artist Ed Bereal also worked in the wake of the Watts uprising. One of his sculptures is on the opposite side of the room.

Dan Nadel: Bereal was using similar ideas of assemblage and collage to make things like his object, but at the time when he was making it, he was pulling from electronics and machine parts and things like that to make it kind of almost like a backpack for urban living. 

Ed Bereal: As far as the iconography, I was a child of the Second World War and was fascinated by German mechanisms, that aesthetic as a kid. I wasn't a Nazi, a seven-year-old Black Nazi, no, I was a kid that lived through his eyes, and Life magazine showed all these battles that were going on in Europe and I fell in love with the airplanes and the tanks and even the shape of the guns, some of the guns and those long trench coats and the swastika and all those things visually were very powerful. I chose to do the swastika facing the other way because again, for aesthetic reasons and that image, that icon had been used by various groups, religions, philosophies that go back to China, to Japan, even the American Indian had used that, and it was a symbol of visual power for me.

Narrator: Dale Brockman Davis’s Arabian Nights, #2 is on the wall to the right, past the entrance to the next gallery. Davis describes the experimental spirit that underpins the work in this room. 

Dale Brockman Davis: The two pots I probably epoxied together to build one form. They weren't made at the same time, but the way that I think it's like you can take disjointed things and put them together and make them one. And then because I was an experimental kind of person and working with different materials, then the leather came into play and I thought. And I thought, okay, let me wrap this. Let me change the whole form and be willing to take that kind of chance risk. And then the harness kind of piece, I'm not sure where I found it, but I needed to tie it together, two really different kinds of materials and make them into a composition that held together as one piece.


Noah Purifoy, Untitled (66 Signs of Neon), 1966. Mixed media assemblage, including burnt wood, acrylic, stencil and color felt, on plywood board, 52 x 36 in. (132 x 91.4 cm). Collection of Christine Ogata and John Baker. Courtesy Noah Purifoy Foundation. © Noah Purifoy. Photograph by Swann Auction Galleries

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