A Whitney Show Highlights Pioneering Sculptor Ruth Asawa’s Works on Paper
The eminent 20th-century artist Ruth Asawa is best known for her airy looped-wire sculptures (featured on a set of U.S. Postal Service stamps released in 2020). Less commonly exhibited is her extensive oeuvre of drawings, which spans decades. In fact, she repeatedly asked galleries and museums to focus on her works on paper but was often denied. Ruth Asawa Through Line, on view now to January 15, 2024, at the Whitney Museum of American Art, brings overdue attention to the artist’s work beyond her mesmerizing wire sculptures.
The exhibition, grouped into eight sections such as “Rhythms and Waves” and “Curiosity and Control,” illuminates Asawa’s lesser-known processes and materials, like her use of stamping tools made out of potatoes, leaves, and fish, or her dimensional folded-paper works. No matter the medium, the influence of the natural world, with both its repetitive linearity and its organic, imperfect forms, is clear.
With this renewed attention on Asawa, ARTnews looked back on the artist’s life and career. Below is a guide to major events in her artistic development and milestones in her practice.
From an early age, Asawa creates artworks. Born in 1926 in Norwalk, California, Asawa was the fourth of seven children. Her parents, Umakichi and Haru Asawa, had immigrated to America from Japan and worked as truck farmers. Discriminatory laws prohibited Asawa’s parents from owning land of their own in California or becoming American citizens. Asawa worked on the family farm before and after school. She once said, “I used to sit on the back of the horse-drawn leveler with my bare feet drawing forms in the sand, which later in life became the bulk of my sculptures.”
Asawa and her family are detained in U.S. internment camps during the 1940s. In 1942, Asawa’s father was arrested and interned in a camp in New Mexico, while she and the rest of her family were detained in Santa Anita, California. While incarcerated, Asawa took drawing classes from Disney animators who were also interned there. The artist was released from an internment camp in Rohwer, Arkansas, in 1943, upon which Ruth enrolled in Milwaukee State Teachers College. There she experienced racism and xenophobia, which ultimately caused her to leave school in 1946 without her degree; the school had refused to place her in a teaching position, which was required to graduate. Asawa subsequently moved to North Carolina to study at Black Mountain College, which was founded in 1933 as a bastion of the avant-garde and had served as a refuge for some artists who fled Nazi Germany and war in Europe.
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