FILTER RESULTS × Close
Skip to Content
Showing 5 of 19


Clay Spohn (aka Clay Edgar Spohn)

American
(1898–1977)

Rolling Forts, Flying Fort and Anti-aircraft Net
1942

Graphite and gouache on paper
28.25 x 34.25 x 0.75 in.
Gift of the Marie Eccles Caine Foundation
1990.7

Months before the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Clay Spohn had dreams of war in spectacular color. To fight the enemy in his dreams, he imagined fantastical war machines before sleeping. Friends encouraged him to paint these visions and show them, with his “guerragraphs” (from the Spanish guerra, war) depicting mechanical monsters, at the San Francisco Museum of Art in February 1942.

The seriousness and detail of his descriptions of the capabilities of these machines, contrasted with the impossibility of building them, was laughable but also frightening, because it demonstrated the lunacy of those who engage in war. Spohn wrote: “The Rolling Fort is supported on a chassis 120 feet above the ground, enabling it to travel rough country at a terrific speed, thus overtaking the slower and comparatively minute tank which it easily destroys, as well as batteries and other battlements.” His Gravitational Sky Hook Aircraft Trap has yet to be invented but are not those primitive drones nearby? The somber coloring is distinct from the bright colors of his other machine drawings, as if to resemble a World War I battle field.

The Rolling Fort illustrates Spohn’s imagination, attention to detail, and power to communicate. Inspired by the exhibit’s fantastical depictions, artist John Hultberg wrote: “Spohn has always been close to the spirit of dada and surrealist outrage, turning rage outward into delight and a benign sense of shock that would express the sense of humor that he felt was at the core of the modern art impulse.”

The horror of the Pearl Harbor attack usurped Spohn’s aim to warn a complacent public of war. Today’s fantastic weaponry, however, has given Spohn’s satire a relevance that he could not have imagined.

David Beasley


Keywords
Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
This object has the following keywords:
  • aircraft - Vehicles that navigate through the air, either supported for flight by buoyancy or by the dynamic action of the air on their surfaces; usually designed to accommodate one or more persons.
  • black
  • brown
  • flying
  • gouache
  • graphite
  • landscape
  • net
  • paper
  • soldiers - Generally refers to those belonging to an army, whether that of a sovereign state, a faction or division within a sovereign state, or of an individual leader. Specifically refers to military personnel of enlisted rank, as distinguished from commissioned officers. For those trained for or engaged in the physical combat of warfare and sanctioned in that function by the society or group for which they fight, irrespective of actual membership in an army, see "warriors."
  • Spirals
  • tank
  • wheel
  • yellow

Exhibition List
This object was included in the following exhibitions:

Also found in
Click a portfolio name to view all the objects in that portfolio
This object is a member of the following portfolios:


Your current search criteria is: Keyword is "BHE".





This site facilitates access to the art and artifact collections by providing digitally searchable records for thousands objects. The information on these pages is not definitive or comprehensive. We are regularly adding artworks and updating research online. We welcome your comments.