Shinique Smith - New Now New York Tuesday, March 12, 2024 | Phillips

Create your first list.

Select an existing list or create a new list to share and manage lots you follow.

  • Provenance

    David Castillo Gallery, Miami
    Acquired from the above by the present owner

  • Exhibited

    Kathryn E. Delmez, ed., Shinique Smith: Wonder and Rainbows, exh. cat., Frist Art Museum, Nashville, 2016, no. 1, pp. 11, 118 (illustrated, p. 11)
    Miami, David Castillo Gallery, Shinique Smith: Spectrums, June 9–July 23, 2016

  • Artist Biography

    Shinique Smith

    American • 1971

    In 2005, Shinique Amie Smith was among the 35 artists chosen for The Studio Museum in Harlem’s Frequency, an exhibition that continued the tradition of identifying a new generation of black artists that the museum had initiated nearly five years earlier with the groundbreaking show Freestyle. Exhibited next to the work of other emerging artists such as Nick Cave, Xaviera Simmons and Hank Willis Thomas, Shinique’s bale sculpture composed of second-hand clothing gained her critical attention. Ever since, she has made installations incorporating materials collected from communities and thrift shops, notably clothes, but also toys and other ephemera.

    Smith was inspired to make sculpture from clothing after reading an article of how a shirt given by a woman in Manhattan to a local thrift store, made its way to a bale of used clothing and eventually was bought in Africa. While retaining the associations, Smith subsumes the material into a composition by tying the textiles together in cubes, bundles and dense assemblages.

     Exploring the connections and values we ascribe to objects, Smith addresses questions of abstraction, all the while probing how her material has both personal meaning, as well as social and cultural significance.

    View More Works

95

Inner Clock

signed, titled, inscribed and dated "Shinique Smith 2014 "Inner Clock" Time is like a clock in my heart..." on the reverse
acrylic, ink, fabric, paper collage and found objects on wood panel
60 1/8 x 48 x 9 in. (152.7 x 121.9 x 22.9 cm)
Executed in 2014.

Estimate
$15,000 - 20,000 

Sold for $16,510

Contact Specialist

Avery Semjen
Associate Specialist, Head of New Now Sale
T +1 212 940 1207
asemjen@phillips.com
 

New Now

New York Auction 12 March 2024