Currently not on view
Currently not on view
This object represents Larimore’s first steps toward incorporating the human figure in his artwork. In his earlier, more spirited, creations he sometimes included hands but here we find a featureless face. Larimore turned more serious in later pieces like this one. The title taken literally means “to bring to steadiness.”
The precarious counterbalance between the elongated hand on one end and the weighty, moonlike orb on the other suggests that balance is not a natural state of being but requires action on our part. This sculpture comes the closest to being Larimore’s self-portrait, illustrating the balance he strives for between his head—the intellectual side—and his hands, which are an extension of his spirit.
Currently not on view
Title: | Balance Is a Verb |
Date: | 2012 |
Artist: | Jack Larimore (American, born 1950) |
Medium: | Salvaged timber, steel, cast plaster |
Dimensions: | 52 × 46 × 18 inches, 75 lb. (132.1 × 116.8 × 45.7 cm, 34.02 kg) |
Classification: | Sculpture |
Credit Line: | Purchased with funds contributed by The Women's Committee and The Craft Show Committee of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2019 |
Accession Number: | 2019-114-1a--c |
Geography: | Made in Bridgeton, New Jersey, United States, North and Central America |
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Currently not on view