Object Details
Artist
Amir Nour
Date
1973
Medium
Bronze with wood
Dimensions
13 x 14 x 9 inches (33 x 35.6 x 22.9 cm)
Including mount: 17 × 12 × 10 3/8 inches (43.2 × 30.5 × 26.4 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of the Friends of African Art
Object
Number
99.036
Amir Nour has lived in the United States since 1969, but his early life in northern Sudan shaped his(…)
Amir Nour has lived in the United States since 1969, but his early life in northern Sudan shaped his artistic concerns. His work is based on stylized geometric forms – adaptations of gourds, of the domes of mosques, of hills – all drawn from childhood memories of his homeland. This work is a dynamic and engaging abstract form and an evocation of one of those Sudanese objects: a lock, and particularly the lock of a granary door, which has an important function in many black African cultures. (The Museum has several elaborately carved granary locks from the Dogon culture in its collection.) Nour’s interpretation of such a lock elegantly integrates the traditional African object into the forms of a modern industrialized world, reflecting the artist’s integration of two very different societies.