Chinatown

Copied Don Baum, Chinatown, 1980, mixed media: wood, crushed metal cans, rulers, cut, glued and assembled, 14 1214 349 14 in. (36.837.523.5 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Koffler, 1984.157.1

Artwork Details

Title
Chinatown
Artist
Date
1980
Location
Not on view
Dimensions
14 1214 349 14 in. (36.837.523.5 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Koffler
Mediums Description
mixed media: wood, crushed metal cans, rulers, cut, glued and assembled
Classifications
Subjects
  • Architecture — domestic — house
Object Number
1984.157.1

Artwork Description

Don Baum picked up discarded objects such as rulers and crushed cans while walking through Chicago’s Chinatown with artist Miyoko Ito. He then used these items to create Chinatown, a piece that is part of his Domus series. In medieval France, the domus was the basic social unit of the village, consisting of both the house and the peasant family residing under its roof. Baum captures a sense of place in Chinatown by including found objects that are traces of the community he portrays.