Title Unknown, Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture, 1989-2004.
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Six miles from the heart of Joshua Tree exists a monumental, and permanent, ten-acre installation of dada-influenced assemblage art. The artist responsible for the Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture, Noah Purifoy, grew up in Jim Crow-era Alabama, but lived and worked most of his life in Los Angeles and Joshua Tree.
A Navy “seabee”-turned-furniture designer-turned artist, Purifoy’s earliest body of sculpture was constructed from burned debris and artifacts that he gathered after the 1965 Watts Rebellion. This work, titled 66 Signs of Neon, became part of a landmark group exhibition about the riots that traveled to several venues between 1966 and 1969. Purifoy spent the following two decades dedicated to public policy work for the California Arts Council. Some of the prominent projects he initiated, amongst many, included founding the Watts Towers Art Center as well as bringing art programming to California’s state prison system. Eventually fatigued of balancing civic life with artistic endeavor, Purifoy left Los Angeles for the Mojave Desert in the late 1980s.
Adrian's Little Theater, Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture, 1989-2004.
In the desert, Purifoy could afford more land to continue his post-Watts Rebellion work on forming sculpture from exclusively junked material, only now he could do so on a much larger scale. He spent the last fifteen years of his life there: gathering, experimenting, and constructing what would one day become his magnum opus across ten-acres of lonely desert land.
Title Unknown, Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture, 1989-2004.
Title Unknown, Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture, 1989-2004.
No Contest (Bicycles), Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture, 1991.
Here in the desert, material objects are precious and people recycle everything. There are swap meets, yard sales, and exchanges of materials going on all the time, leaving little or nothing for the junk artist. So, I collect materials that are not recycled in any other way and what I am doing with those objects is attracting attention.
- Noah Purifoy