Skip to main content

Grotesque Self-Portrait of the Artist as the Goddess Kali

(American, born in 1944)
1990
Object Place for LabelTallahassee, Florida
Medium/TechniqueCloisonné enamel, fine silver, 24 kt gold, 14 kt gold, moonstone, opal, pearl
DimensionsOverall: 10.2 x 7.6 x 2.5 cm, 111.4 gm (4 x 3 x 1 in., 0.2 lb.)
Credit LineThe Daphne Farago Collection
Accession number2006.235
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsJewelry / Adornment
Description
In the 1980s and 1990s many jewelers used their refined technical skills to create narrative and figurative jewelry. William Harper sees his work as an expression of his emotions, sexuality, and spirituality. He uses enamel to create evocative painterly effects, and by avoiding high-gloss surfaces, he allows viewers to see deeply into the translucent material, as if into his inner world. In the brooch titled Grotesque Self-Portrait of the Artist as the Goddess Kali, Harper interprets the Hindu deity Kali as a force for both creative energy (represented by the color red) and of all-consuming destruction (the color black), combined with references to both male and female Hindu sexual symbols.
ProvenanceSusan Cummins Gallery; Daphne Farago, May 4, 1993 Daphne Farago; to MFA, 2006, gift of Daphne Farago.
Copyright© William Harper
Le Fleur Du Mal #11
William Harper
1985
Magic Charm Beads
William Harper
1984
The Second Raj Collage
William Harper
1989
Ear Folly #10: Carapace
William Harper
1995
Pair of earrings
Joan Parcher
1993
Single-strand pearl necklace
Yazzie Johnson
1990s
Opal pin
Lilly Fitzgerald
before 1985
Necklace with pendant
Robert W. Ebendorf
about 1995
Panel Bracelet #1275
Earl B. Pardon
1988
Choker #48
Mary Lee Hu
1979