On view

Modern Art
Mitchell Wolfson, Jr. Gallery

Plastron et cravate (Shirtfront and Necktie),

1927

Hans (Jean) Arp, 1886–1966; born Strasbourg, France; died Basel, Switzerland; active Paris, France, and Zurich, Switzerland
2012-1
In 1916, while living in Zurich, Arp began experimenting with cut wood reliefs that fused two significant innovations of twentieth-century art: collage and abstraction. Although the shapes and compositions he developed were nonreferential, Arp considered them part of an “object language” inspired by nature and everyday life. With Shirtfront and Necktie, he rendered banal objects into stylized and abstract tableaux. The work demonstrates how, after moving to Paris in the 1920s, Arp absorbed key ambitions of the art movements centered in the city. He adapted the Dadaists’ preoccupation with recontextualizing or reclassifying everyday objects and the Surrealists’ interest in collage and the juxtaposition of disparate forms.

More Context

Handbook Entry

More About This Object

Information

Title
Plastron et cravate (Shirtfront and Necktie)
Dates

1927

Medium
Cut and painted cardboard in painted wood frame
Dimensions
Unframed: 51.1 × 39.1 × 0.6 cm (20 1/8 × 15 3/8 × 1/4 in.) frame: 68.4 × 56.2 × 3.2 cm (26 15/16 × 22 1/8 × 1 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund
Object Number
2012-1
Culture
Materials

Jean Brown Collection; Brown Family Collection, Tyringham, Massachusetts, sold; to Princeton University Art Museum, 2012.