Len Lye

Twilight

Artwork Detail

New Zealand émigré artist Len Lye relied heavily on evolutionary biology and theories of the collective unconscious to create this underwater seascape inhabited by primitive life forms. At right an organism resembling a sea urchin agitates the seabottom as it hurtles toward a tower of sea kelp. Penetrating that leafy mass with an elongated and bifurcated spike, the aggressive subaquatic creature discharges bubbles marked by yellow asterisks, pollenating the ocean floor.

Similar to other artists working in New York in the mid-1940s, Lye in this early Abstract Expressionist composition combines motifs culled from tribal art with shapes resembling cellular structures to evoke the primordial energies animating the universal human spirit. The striped pinwheel at lower right, for example, bears a strong visual affinity to a Māori koru, while the blue and purple cruciform object at left reminds one of an X chromosome. The purple circle at upper center with a red bullseye and concentric red and blue rings recalls the symbol of the Royal British Air Force, a possible reference to Lye’s 1944 move to the US from the United Kingdom.

Title
Twilight
Artist/creator
Len Lye
Production date
1945
Medium
oil on hessian mounted on wood
Dimensions
734 x 1036 mm
Credit line
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 2024
Accession no
2024/23
Copyright
Copying restrictions apply
Department
New Zealand Art
Display status
Not on display

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