
Tenth Stone
<p>Between 1967 and 1969, Bontecou created a group of large flower sculptures made of vacuum-formed plastic whose centers trail long tendrils and which resemble gas masks. She envisioned these to be the products of a post-apocalyptic world, commenting that “I was doing a lot of drawings of flowers prior to [the sculptures]. And I thought, ‘this is all we’re going to have left. Make a few plastic flowers in the world and that will be it. Give them a few [gas] masks, let them survive.’”</p> <p>With <em>Tenth Stone</em>, Bontecou experimented with several subtle colors, but settled on a simple black for the final, published print. The flower’s petals and stem are riveted like metal, merging the botanical and the mechanical to create a disturbing hybrid that reflects, among other things, Bontecou’s fears for the environment.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1968
- Dimensions
- Image: 95 × 56.1 cm (37 7/16 × 22 1/8 in.); Sheet: 104.7 × 71.1 cm (41 1/4 × 28 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Lee Bontecou
Artist

Sculpture
The work of abstract sculptor Lee Bontecou evades easy categorization. Although not affiliated with any artistic movement, her objects share similarities with Minimalism and Abstract Expressionism and evoke early Cubist sculpture. Her sculptures are typically defined by dark cavernous voids at their centers, and posses an industrial, seemingly mechanical aesthetic.
Full artist profile →More
More by Lee Bontecou
An Untitled Print
1981 · Lithograph from fourteen plates in blue and green ink on white wove paper
Fifteenth Stone
1980 · Lithograph from one stone in black ink on white wove paper
Sixteenth Stone
1980 · Lithograph from one stone in gray ink on tan wove paper
Study for An Untitled Print
1979 · Lithograph from two stones in black and white on gray wove paper
Study for An Untitled Print (White on Black)
1979 · Lithograph from one stone in white on black wove paper
Pirates
1979 · Lithograph from seven plates and three stones in black, gray, blue, purple, and metallic silver ink on white wove paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Lee Bontecou
- Year
- 1968
- Dimensions
- Image: 95 × 56.1 cm (37 7/16 × 22 1/8 in.); Sheet: 104.7 × 71.1 cm (41 1/4 × 28 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1968-096059
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





