Items Similar to "Hitch Hiked" Hayward Oubre, Painted Wire Sculpture, Southern Black Artist
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 2
Hayward Oubre"Hitch Hiked" Hayward Oubre, Painted Wire Sculpture, Southern Black Artistcirca 1960
circa 1960
$50,000
£38,110.87
€43,956.90
CA$71,014.95
A$76,313.03
CHF 40,946.37
MX$898,920.90
NOK 514,855.20
SEK 470,316.90
DKK 328,516.50
About the Item
Hayward Oubre
Hitch Hiked, 1960
Signed on Base: OUBRE 60
Painted wire sculpture
45 H. x 21 W. x 19 D. inches
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist
Deeply attached to his Southern heritage, Hayward Louis Oubre Jr. relied on childhood memories to create paintings and prints portraying African American life in his hometown of New Orleans. However, he is best remembered today for works that transcend any regionalist influences: airy wire sculptures that are celebrated for their resilience, strength, balance, and engineering mastery.
Born to a family of African and French descent, Oubre’s youthful artistic talent was encouraged in the New Orleans parochial schools he attended. Following high school, he enrolled at Dillard University, where he was a standout member of the football and track teams, an illustrator for the college newspaper, and the institution’s first art major. Upon his graduation in 1939, Oubre continued his studies at Atlanta University, thriving under the tutelage of painter and muralist Hale Woodruff and sculptor Nancy Elizabeth Prophet, who encouraged Oubre to submit his work to the annual Atlanta University exhibitions. In 1941, Oubre was assigned to help with a special art initiative at Tuskegee Institute, where he met George Washington Carver, an admirer of the fledgling artist’s work.
Oubre temporarily relinquished his artistic pursuits later in 1941 when he was drafted into military service. Serving with the Army Corps of Engineers during World War II, Oubre joined 3,700 African American soldiers charged with building a 1500-mile military supply route—now known as the Alcan Highway—that connected Alaska to the continental United States. These soldiers labored under brutal conditions to complete the assignment in eight months.
Thanks to the GI Bill, Oubre was able to continue his education in art at the University of Iowa, earning his master’s degree from the University of Iowa. He then launched an extended career as an art educator at a series of historically black colleges and universities: Florida Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes (1948‒1949); Alabama State College (1949‒1965); and, finally, at Winston-Salem State University (1965‒1981), where he initiated the studio art program. Over three decades, Oubre mentored countless aspiring African American artists and embraced an “open studio concept” which allowed pupils to advance at their own pace. In an effort to provide his painting students with the proper learning material, Oubre conceived and copyrighted “a concise study of color mixing and color relationships” using a color wheel that updated and expanded the 1810 color triangle developed by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Oubre's two-dimensional works feature simplified, sometimes abstracted, forms that reflect the artist’s familiarity with Picasso’s Analytic and Synthetic Cubism. While he had previously employed clay and wood to create closed-form sculptures, it was during his tenure at Alabama State College in the 1950s that Oubre began fabricating his acclaimed wire sculptures. As he slowly and delicately shaped ordinary wire clothes hangers with hand pliers, the artist confronted structural challenges that demanded a considerable amount of strength and, at times, physical pain, to overcome. Nicknamed by his students as the “master of torque,” Oubre detailed his method in his 1960 publication, The Art of Wire Sculpture. One reviewer writing of Oubre’s sculptures opined that “light and air are as critical to the work as the metal that gives them definition.”
Although Oubre’s work was not widely exhibited during his lifetime, his oeuvre has attracted increased curatorial attention and examples of his work are represented in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Mint Museum of Art, and the University of Delaware. In 1993, the Pentagon honored Oubre and other surviving soldiers from the Alcan Highway battalion for their service.
About the Seller
5.0
Platinum Seller
Premium sellers with a 4.7+ rating and 24-hour response times
Established in 2022
1stDibs seller since 2022
136 sales on 1stDibs
Typical response time: <1 hour
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Shipping from: New York, NY
- Return Policy
More From This Seller
View All"The Trap" Hayward Oubre, Painted Wire Sculpture, Black Artist
Located in New York, NY
Hayward Oubre
The Trap, c. 1960
Painted wire sculpture
40 H. x 16 1/2 W. x 21 D. inches
Provenance:
Estate of the Artist
Deeply attached to his Souther...
Category
1960s Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Wire
"Untitled" Sidney Gordin, Abstract Metal Steel Sculpture
By Sidney Gordin
Located in New York, NY
Sidney Gordin
Untitled, 1958
Incised with initials
Welded Steel
15 x 10 1/2 x 6 inches
Provenance:
Eric Firestone Gallery, New York
On October 24, 1918, Sidney Gordin was born in Chelyabinsk, Russia. He spent his early years in Shanghai, China. At the age of four, he moved with his family to New York. Gordin’s nephew, Eliot Nemzer recalls that when Gordin was a child he attended “a dinner party with his parents. Someone showed him a book of pictures that when thumbed through quickly made the image appear to move. This person then gave him a wad of blank papers and something to write with. Sid created a similar type of moving image with his materials. All the adults at the party became quite excited [and] praised his efforts. Sid told me he thought this was a pivotal experience in guiding him towards his vocation.” During his formative years at Brooklyn Technical High School, he briefly contemplated the idea of becoming an architect; yet, by the time he enrolled at Cooper Union, he was determined to become a professional artist. There, he studied under Morris Kantor (1896-1974) and Leo Katz...
Category
1950s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
$11,200 Sale Price
20% Off
"Roland, " George Sugarman, Abstract Steel Sculpture
By George Sugarman
Located in New York, NY
George Sugarman (1912 - 1999)
Roland, 1970
Patinated steel
17 3/8 x 16 x 5 1/4 inches
Incised with the artist's signature and numbered "15/17" on the underside
Manufactured by Lippin...
Category
1970s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
"Monument 8" Calvin Marcus, Mixed Media Construction Contemporary Sculpture
Located in New York, NY
Calvin Marcus
Monument 8, 2018
Wood, glass, hot glue, cardboard, plastic, paper pulp, sulfur, ash, gesso, Cel-Vinyl, flashe, watercolor and other media sculpture
22" high x 13 1/4" w...
Category
2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Glass, Plastic, Wood, Paper, Glue, Mixed Media, Watercolor, Cardboard
"Kinetic Sculpture" Roger Phillips, 1985 Rotating Blue Constructivist Sculpture
By Roger Phillips
Located in New York, NY
Roger Phillips
Kinetic Sculpture
Painted iron and aluminum on walnut plinth base
44 1/2 inches high x 13 inches wide x 7 3/4 inches deep
oger Phillips was born in New York City in ...
Category
1980s Constructivist Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Enamel, Iron
"Untitled - Face" Lonnie Holley, Mixed Media, Found and Assembled Objects
By Lonnie Holley
Located in New York, NY
Lonnie Holley
Untitled - Face , circa 1989
Mixed media sculpture, found and assembled objects
25 x 16 1/2 x 4 1/2 inches
Since 1979, Holley has dedicated his life to the realm of improvisational creativity. His artistic expressions and musical works, emerging from adversity and challenges, but even more so from a relentless curiosity and innate need, have taken form in various mediums such as drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, performance, music, and filmmaking. Holley’s sculptures are crafted from found objects, reflecting the ancient traditions of African American sculpture...
Category
1980s American Modern Mixed Media
Materials
Wood, Paint, Found Objects, Mixed Media
You May Also Like
Wire Form with Three Peaks (2020), abstract geometric sculpture, copper, wire
By Dena Paige Fischer
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Biomorphic and earthy yet industrial style wall or tabletop sculpture. Abstract wire form with hammered copper plate and wrapped copper wire. ...
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Wire, Copper
Wire and Pipe Sculpture
Located in San Diego, CA
Sculpture made of wire, pipe, with blue acrylic paint in portions. The signature is not clear, the best we can make of the signature is by E. Rizzuto. Title is also unclear "New D......
Category
20th Century North American Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Wire
$445 Sale Price
22% Off
Dancing Wire Form (2022), terracotta concrete abstract sculpture, metal wire
By Dena Paige Fischer
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Biomorphic and earthy yet industrial style wall or tabletop sculpture. Abstract wire form with corrugated hydrocal plaster form. The piece is smooth and...
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Concrete, Wire
Mid-Century Modern Skeletal Wire Rod Abstract Sculpture
Located in New Windsor, NY
An amazing spider's web of a rollercoaster of design and line. This sculpture is just as delicate and light filled like a spider's web. A work that reaches, careens, and zigzags Constantly changing maze of line and perspective. Comprised of welded metal rods and airbrushed in different colors. Circa 1960. Good overall condition with all welds intact. Some minor rust and pitting, but that just adds to the piece's outsider art charm. Clipped corners on the piece's base. Reminiscent of a small skeletal sculpture by the artist, Lee Bontecou...
Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Outsider and Self Taught Art
Materials
Metal, Steel
$2,300 Sale Price
20% Off
Modernist Wire, Copper and Mache "Worlds Expansion" Albright Knox
Located in Buffalo, NY
Modernist wire. Copper and papier mâché "Worlds Expansion" Albright Knox, amazing hand executed sculpture, recently purchased from Buffalo NY estate, pos...
Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Sculptures and Carvings
Materials
Copper, Wire
Eduardo Torres MCM Wire Newspaper Reader Sculpture
Located in Dallas, TX
The Brendan Bass Estate Collection pays homage to the beauty of vintage and antique
pieces, each artfully concealing endless stories collected through the generations in which they ...
Category
20th Century Mid-Century Modern Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Metal, Wire
More Ways To Browse
Vintage Wire Sculpture
Black Wire Sculpture
Sculpture 60
Vintage Torque
Vintage Clothes Hangers
Hayward Oubre
Leonard Baskin Bronze Sculpture
Leonard Baskin Bronze
Lolly Pop
Marshall Fredericks
Martin Eichinger
Matteo Mauro
Maurice Duchin
Mr Imagination
Nude Fun
Nureyev Bronze
Outdoor Pop Art Sculptures
Picasso Terracotta Tile













