Richard Hunt USA, b. 1935
78.7 x 38.1 x 104.1 cm
By the time Hunt graduated from SAIC in 1957, his work had already been exhibited by MoMA, a testament to his strikingly personal language of lyrical abstraction, mature beyond his years. Though he was comfortable working with a range of materials, including found objects, wood and steel, a fellowship that allowed him to travel through reconstructed Europe in 1958 convinced him that metal epitomized the spirit of the Modern World.
After returning from Europe, Hunt enlisted in the US Army, serving two years during the early period of the Vietnam War. The uncanny, eerily human forms that dominate his works from this time express the strange marriage Hunt saw evolving between nature and modern machines. A series of untitled drawings from 1959 portray assemblages of dismembered, bonelike forms floating amidst washed out landscapes. The steel sculpture Forms with Moving Line (1960), made the year Hunt finished his Army tour, suggests a dark, creeping hybridity; not only is this landmark early work alarming in its multitudinous visual presence, its title boldly evokes both military lingo and formalist abstraction.
Throughout the 1960s, Hunt’s emergent visual voice encapsulated both the hope and suspicion of the era. The graceful lines of Coil (1962) suggest the beautiful marvels of Atomic Age technology, while the inherent anxiety of the era is expressed by the explosive, fragmented burst of tubes and horns at the sculpture’s crown. Similar concepts animate Tubing Form #10 (1962), with its antler-like appendages, amalgam of twisted spines, spent bullet casings, and industrial conduits.