Lot Essay
David Smith produced an important group of sculptures in 1945 and 1946 in which he distilled and abstracted the Surrealist and overtly political imagery of his previous work into inventive, ambiguous and suggestive forms. Some of these sculptures, including Spectre of Mother, treat intensely personal subjects not commonly addressed in the medium of sculpture. Here, Smith confronts his strict Methodist family, specifically his mother "who appears to have been a powerful advocate of piety, propriety, and hard work" and not at all supportive of his artistic development. (K. Wilkin, op cit., p. 11)
Smith made a number of drawings of insects in his notebooks, including the praying mantis that dominates Spectre of Mother. According to Krauss, "Dorothy Dehner has said that the praying mantis held a speical horror for Smith, perhaps because it is a female creature which devours males. In this work, Smith's fears about his susceptibilty to the influence of his Midwestern background, and particularly his mother, seem to be expressed." (R. Krauss, op cit., p. 41)
Smith made a number of drawings of insects in his notebooks, including the praying mantis that dominates Spectre of Mother. According to Krauss, "Dorothy Dehner has said that the praying mantis held a speical horror for Smith, perhaps because it is a female creature which devours males. In this work, Smith's fears about his susceptibilty to the influence of his Midwestern background, and particularly his mother, seem to be expressed." (R. Krauss, op cit., p. 41)