Seymour Locks is one of the progenitors of assemblage
and found object construction in the Bay Area art
scene during the early to mid-fifties. Born in
Illinois, he attended San Jose State College and
Stanford University (Master of Arts, 1946). Locks
began teaching at San Francisco State College in
1947. His work was widely seen in San Francisco
throughout the 1950s, and his influence can be
seen in younger artists as disparate as DeForest
and Hedrick, as well as Southern California assemblage
artists Berman, Herms and Kienholz.
Seymour Locks's nail sculptures plumb a
deep, archaic well of feeling and provoke a response
that cannot be explained. They were made by an
artist who had been an otherwise conventional painter
of landscapes, a tinkerer with Abstract Expressionism,
in a city where developments in contemporary art
often seemed to arrive slowly, in haphazard fashion.
On another level, of course, the nail sculptures
are simply what they appear to be: stumps or fragments
of wood into which the artist hammered hundreds
and even thousands of nails, along with a variety
of affixed objects, including gears, drill bits,
brass and copper foil, charms, jewelry, bottle
caps, entangled nests of wire and other salvage.
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