Currently not on view

Clytie

Elizabeth Colomba, born 1976, Épinay-sur-Seine, France; active New York, NY
2017-1

As in many of Colomba’s works, this watercolor expresses her intent to create an alternate history of black identity, expression, and community through the appropriation and disruption of traditional Western representations of biblical or mythological female characters. According to the Roman poet Ovid’s Metamorphoses, the sea-nymph Clytie was spurned by the sun god, Helios (later called Apollo), and slowly wasted away while gazing at his chariot traversing the sky; she was then transformed into a flower that always turns its face toward the sun. Although the flower in Ovid’s tale is thought to be a marigold or a heliotrope, by the seventeenth century it was usually depicted as a sunflower, native to the Americas. Here Colomba envisioned the traumatized Clytie as a woman of color, clothed not in classical drapery but in a mid-nineteenth-century ball gown. Squeezed into the corner of a lavishly decorated interior, she shrinks away from the sunflowers displayed in a Neoclassical vase on the mantel and the Baroque painting of Apollo above.

Information

Object Number
2017-1
Maker
Elizabeth Colomba
Medium
Watercolor and gouache over graphite
Dates

2008

Dimensions
22.9 × 22.9 cm (9 × 9 in.) frame: 43.8 × 33 cm (17 1/4 × 13 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, gift of the PECO Foundation
Place Made

North America, United States, New York, New York

Inscription
Signed and dated, lower left [vertical]: Elizabeth Colomba 08
Materials
watercolor, wove paper