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Terry Adkins, Coahoma (from Belted Bronze), 2007
Terry Adkins, Coahoma (from Belted Bronze), 2007

Terry Adkins

Coahoma (from Belted Bronze), 2007
aluminium, steel
304.8 x 61 x 61 cm.
120 x 24 x 24 in.
copyright the artist
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Adkins’s totemic sculpture Coahoma is part of a group of works dedicated to the blues singer Bessie Smith (1894–1937), which were first exhibited in the recital ‘Belted Bronze’ at Pageant Soloveev, Philadelphia. Nicknamed ‘the Empress of the Blues’, Smith was the most popular female blues singer of her time and recorded regularly with important early jazz instrumentalists such as Clarence Williams, James P. Johnson, and various members of Fletcher Henderson’s band, including Louis Armstrong and Charlie Green. For Adkins, Smith represents the often contradictory lives of transgressive figures, who are both lauded and thwarted by cultural and historical norms; in Smith’s case, she was paid no loyalties by Columbia Records for the 160 releases she performed for the label and was considered outside of the mainstream because of the eroticism of her music and personal life. She died in 1937 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Coahoma, Mississippi. Conceiving Smith as a creative deity, Adkins’s Coahoma draws from the stylised Songye power figure produced in what is today the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The standard Songye sculpture is composed of a columnar geometric form that is divided into three sections of the body: a protruding head, an enlarged midsection, and short legs atop large, paddle-shaped feet. In Adkins’s rendition, Smith is symbolised by an abstract figure formed of three rounded geometric forms, topped with a trumpet mute. The sculpture also recalls Endless Column (1918) by Constantin Brancusi, whose work stands as a recurring reference in Adkins’s oeuvre. (AL June 2021)
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Adkins’s totemic sculpture Coahoma is part of a group of works dedicated to the blues singer Bessie Smith (1894–1937), which were first exhibited in the recital ‘Belted Bronze’ at Pageant Soloveev, Philadelphia. Nicknamed ‘the Empress of the Blues’, Smith was the most popular female blues singer of her time and recorded regularly with important early jazz instrumentalists such as Clarence Williams, James P. Johnson, and various members of Fletcher Henderson’s band, including Louis Armstrong and Charlie Green. For Adkins, Smith represents the often contradictory lives of transgressive figures, who are both lauded and thwarted by cultural and historical norms; in Smith’s case, she was paid no loyalties by Columbia Records for the 160 releases she performed for the label and was considered outside of the mainstream because of the eroticism of her music and personal life. She died in 1937 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Coahoma, Mississippi.


Conceiving Smith as a creative deity, Adkins’s Coahoma draws from the stylised Songye power figure produced in what is today the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The standard Songye sculpture is composed of a columnar geometric form that is divided into three sections of the body: a protruding head, an enlarged midsection, and short legs atop large, paddle-shaped feet. In Adkins’s rendition, Smith is symbolised by an abstract figure formed of three rounded geometric forms, topped with a trumpet mute. The sculpture also recalls Endless Column (1918) by Constantin Brancusi, whose work stands as a recurring reference in Adkins’s oeuvre.

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Provenance

Estate of the artist 
sold by Thomas Dane Gallery to Eli Khoury

Exhibitions

Terry Adkins: Infinity Is Always Less Than One, ICA Miami, Miami FL, 17 May – 23 September 2018

Solitude, Thomas Dane Gallery, London, England, 28 April – 27 May 2017

All The World's Futures, 56th International Art Exhibition, Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy, 9 May – 22 November 2015

Recital, Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University, Evanston IL, 1 January – 24 March 2013

Recital, The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs NY, 14 July – 2 December 2012

Recital in Eight Dominions: Terry Adkins After Bessie Smith, Songs of Hearth and Valor, The Warehouse Gallery, Syracuse University NY, 2008
Recital in Eight Dominions: Terry Adkins After Bessie Smith, Belted Bronze, Pageant Soloveev, Philadelphia PA, 27 April – 18 June 2007

Literature

Terry Adkins. Infinity is Always Less Than One, Miami, FL: ICA Miami; Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2019, pp. 68–69 ill., 84–85 ill., 86 ill.

Berry, Ian, ed, Recital, Saratoga Springs, NY: The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum Art Gallery at Skidmore College; New York, NY: Prestel Publishing, 2017, pp. 8–9 ill, 182–183 ill., 260 ill.

Publications

Terry Adkins: Portraits. New York NY: Salon 94, 2016, pp. 10-11, 13 ill. in colour
Terry Adkins: Songs of Hearth and Valor. Syracuse NY: The Warehouse Gallery, 2008, pg. 4 ill. in colour
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