Sherrie Levine, Fountain

Sherry Levine, Fountain (Buddha), 1996. Bronze, 12” x 17” x 16”.
Sherrie Levine, Fountain (Buddha), 1996. Bronze, 12” x 17” x 16”.

Sherrie Levine is known for appropriating the work of canonical male artists in order to deconstruct accepted art-historical concepts like originality, authenticity, authorship, and the purity of medium and suggest their inherent mutability. Levine created a cast bronze replica of Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain, 1917. In Levine’s Fountain (Buddha), she recasts Duchamp’s work in a critical light, challenging the nearly universal acceptance and celebration of Duchamp’s early twentieth-century radicalism. Levine subverts the everyday quality of Duchamp’s readymade by casting the work in bronze, a valuable material with strong currency in the history of sculpture. Levine collapses multiple associations within this work, as the low-culture urinal is presented as a bronze masterwork. The title points to the visual similarity of the upturned urinal with Buddhist reliquary sculptures, offering many pathways for reconsidering the original work.[1]


  1. Fountain (Buddha) | icaboston.org..

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