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Study for Alabama Wall (Variant)

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William Christenberry (aka Bill Christenberry)
American, 1936–2016

Study for Alabama Wall (Variant)

1992

Object Type: Mixed Media
Creation Place: North America, American, Alabama
Dimensions:
8 1/2 x 4 5/8 in. (22 x 12 cm)
Medium and Support: Acrylic, color pencil, ink, and graphite on paper
Accession Number: S1992.0001

Credit Line: Gift of the artist.


In addition to the photography and sculpture that form the bulk of his work, Christenberry has made a number of wall constructions comprising found objects and other materials. The first was "Southern Monument" (1979), commissioned by the General Services Administration Art-in-Architecture program for the Federal Building in Jackson, Mississippi. The elements favored by Christenberry speak to a shifting culture—old, weather-beaten, metal advertising signs, car license plates, painted and rusted metal scraps tying together remnants of the past.

In 1985 Christenberry built "Alabama Wall", a square construction now owned by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC. "Alabama Wall (Variant)" was commissioned by The Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts in 1992 for installation in a niche over a doorway in the museum’s rotunda. The work is rectangular, designedto be seen from a distance and from below. The first "Alabama Wall" is a dense assemblage of materials, predominantly license plates and other bits of rusted metal. The museum’s variant seems lighter and more festive, dense at the bottom and visually less heavy at the top. Christenberry used the dismantled calligraphy of an old Coca-Cola sign to set the tone at the base, from which the other materials rise like fizz to the top. The work embodies the famous words of Agee’s preface to "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men": “If I could do it, I’d do no writing at all here. It would be photographs; the rest would be fragments of cloth, bits of cotton, lumps of earth…. Booksellers would consider it quite a novelty; critics would murmur yes, but is it art…?” Christenberry’s Walls are similarly fragmentary evocations of the American South.

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