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Polymorphic Sculpture: Leo Amino's Experiments in Three Dimensions

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Polymorphic Sculpture: Leo Amino's Experiments in Three DimensionsSaturday, October 20, 2018 - Sunday, April 12, 2020

Littman Gallery

The American sculptor Leo Amino (1911-1989) was born in Taiwan to Japanese parents and raised in Tokyo. He arrived in California as a student in 1929 and soon settled in New York where he briefly studied direct carving techniques under Chaim Gross. Interested in transparency, light, and a dialogue between interior form and outer structure, Amino explored different ways of opening up sculptural space and new materials like resin and plastic. His innovative and polymorphic sculpture drew from American modernism, European surrealism and constructivism, Henry Moore’s biomorphic forms, and the new materials that were introduced into American manufacturing after World War II. Drawn primarily from the Zimmerli’s collection, the exhibition includes examples of Amino’s work in wood, plastic, and resin.

Organized by Donna Gustafson, Curator of American Art and Mellon Director for Academic Programs

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Composition
Leo Amino
1953
Composition #25
Leo Amino
September 1952
Gestation
Leo Amino
August 3, 1946
Incantation
Leo Amino
January 14, 1953
In Space #19
Leo Amino
October 12, 1951
Inter Play #11
Leo Amino
1948
Mansion
Leo Amino
December 27, 1956
Mood in Concave
Leo Amino
1939
Phoenix
Leo Amino
May 16, 1950
Refractional #16
Leo Amino
May 1966
Stamen
Leo Amino
March 24, 1950
Torso
Leo Amino
1953
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