BOSTON and CLEVELAND (September 16, 2025)—For more than half a century, the preeminent sculptor Martin Puryear (born 1941) has captivated the public with works of astonishing beauty and elaborate craftsmanship, whose sources of inspiration range from global cultures and social history to the natural world. Co-organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), and the Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA), Martin Puryear: Nexus is the first substantial survey of the artist’s work in nearly two decades. Assembling some 50 works from across Puryear’s career, the exhibition focuses on his use of a rich variety of materials and media—from sculptures in wood, leather, glass, marble, and metal to rarely shown drawings and prints.
After debuting at the MFA, where it is on view in the Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art from September 27, 2025 through February 8, 2026, the exhibition travels to the Cleveland Museum of Art from April 12 through August 9, 2026, followed by the High Museum of Art in Atlanta from September 25, 2026 through January 17, 2027. Martin Puryear: Nexus is accompanied by a catalogue produced by the Cleveland Museum of Art.
“With this exhibition we are pleased to feature an exceptional artist of our time and powerful works that speak to Martin Puryear's creativity and exceptional craftsmanship, and the lifelong learning that has fueled his practice,” said Pierre Terjanian, the MFA’s Ann and Graham Gund Director. “The sculptures included in this survey extend a compelling invitation to engage with themes of culture, identity, and history. We are grateful to our colleagues at the Cleveland Museum of Art for their partnership in making this project possible.”
“Martin Puryear’s art is staggeringly beautiful and also moving in the way that it invites us to see with fresh eyes the world we inhabit,” said William M. Griswold, Sarah S. and Alexander M. Cutler Director, the Cleveland Museum of Art. “Given the remarkable range of aesthetic traditions, cultural histories, and techniques of making that Puryear integrates in his work, we are especially pleased to present his career retrospective at museums with comprehensive collections from around the world, and spanning thousands of years of history.”
Martin Puryear: Nexus reflects the artist’s singular practice, one that combines the distinctive techniques of production with the formal histories he has encountered through a lifetime of movement, research, and study. The exhibition begins with works on paper from the early 1960s and follows Puryear’s subsequent innovations in form, material, and process. Rooted in new scholarship, Martin Puryear: Nexus illuminates the ways in which the artist’s unique vocabulary has been shaped by his enduring interests in global traditions of material culture, African American history, and the natural world.
Exhibition Highlights
Self (1978, The Joslyn Art Museum)
One of Puryear’s most iconic sculptures, Self shows the importance of dynamic formal oppositions in the artist’s work. At once a dark monolithic mass, Self is light and hollow, enclosing a hidden interior volume. It was assembled piece by piece through cold molding, a technique that Puryear learned through boat-building and which he has integrated into some of his most celebrated sculptures.
Night and Day (1984, Nasher Sculpture Center)
A rarely exhibited work, Night and Day reflects Puryear’s enduring interest in natural manifestations of black and white, which divide the two halves of the work’s semicircular arch. One end of the arch sits on the floor, while the other hovers just above it.
On the Tundra (1986, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
Puryear’s interest in the natural world and ornithology are reflected in his creation of this cast iron sculpture, an abstracted form suggesting a falcon perched on a rock. It was partially inspired by a work from the MFA’s collection: a 1619 portrait of a gyrfalcon by the Mughal court painter Mansur (active around 1590–1630). Mansur’s painting—a reproduction of which hangs in Puryear’s studio—was immediately compelling for him not only within the history of ornithological portraiture but also as a representation of geopolitical trade routes, as the gyrfalcon is not native to India and likely arrived via diplomatic trade channels from Europe. The exhibition also includes On the Tundra (Winter) (2022, collection of the artist), a recent iteration of the original sculpture in white marble.
Confessional (1996–2000, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
Composed partly of wire mesh covered with tar, this work evokes a hollow inner space that is visible and obscured at the same time. Its title suggests one possible reading, delineating the wooden platform as a place upon which a confessor—implicitly, the viewer—may kneel and “confess.” Confessional is included only in Boston’s presentation.
Big Phrygian (2010–14, Glenstone Museum)
This colossal sculpture is the most dramatic representation of Puryear’s sustained engagement with the lineage of the Phrygian cap. This headdress signified formerly enslaved people in ancient Rome and later became a symbol of resistance to persecution during the French and American Revolutions. In the exhibition it is shown alongside the etching Phrygian (Cap in the Air) (2012, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).
Hibernian Testosterone (2018, courtesy of the artist and Matthew Marks Gallery)
This large, wall-mounted sculpture reproduces in full scale the 12-foot antlers of the Irish elk, an extinct species of deer common during the Ice Age. Scientists of the 1700s had a theory that its antlers—which likely evolved to help the species survive combat and demonstrate sexual prowess and whose growth was propelled by testosterone—contributed to its extinction as they eventually became too heavy for the animal to hold up. Puryear distills this parable-like history from the animal kingdom into a straightforward visual statement, suspending the antlers from an inverted cross.
Aso Oke (2019, Jack Shear Collection)
Encountered by visitors before they enter the exhibition, this monumental sculpture, cast in bronze, borrows its form from the fila gobi, a ceremonial cap worn by the Yoruba people of Nigeria. The intricate open latticework is a recurring technique used by Puryear throughout his career.
A Column for Sally Hemings (2021, collection of the artist)
One of Puryear’s few indoor site-specific sculptures, this was created for the US Pavilion at the 2019 Venice Biennale. Responding to the pavilion’s architecture, which was modeled on Monticello—the primary residence and plantation of Thomas Jefferson—the work’s fluted base echoes the Doric columns between which visitors passed to enter the exhibition space in Venice. The sculpture’s title refers to Sally Hemings (1773–1835), the enslaved Black woman, with whom Jefferson had at least six children.
Martin Puryear: Nexus also features a film that documents Puryear’s most recent outdoor work Lookout (2023), a permanent site-specific commission for the Storm King Art Center. In Cleveland and Atlanta, additional film footage as well as prints, drawings, and documentation of other public commissions will also be on view, demonstrating how Puryear extends his studio practice into the public realm and maintains his commitment to craft and concept on a monumental scale.
The exhibition is co-curated by Emily Liebert, Lauren Rich Fine Curator of Contemporary Art, Chair of Art of the Americas, Modern and Contemporary Art, The Cleveland Museum of Art, and Reto Thüring, Head of Culture at the Foundation for Art, Culture, and History in Winterthur, Switzerland and former Beal Family Chair, Department of Contemporary Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston with Gabriella Shypula, Leigh and Mary Carter Director’s Research Fellow, The Cleveland Museum of Art. The MFA’s presentation is organized by Ian Alteveer, Beal Family Chair, Department of Contemporary Art with Daisy Alejandre, Curatorial Assistant, Contemporary Art. The High’s presentation is organized by Michael Rooks, Wieland Family Senior Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art.
Public Programs
Visitors are invited to explore Puryear’s work further through a selection of public programs at the MFA:
Martin Puryear and Craft
October 8
$28 for members and $35 for nonmembers in person, $16 for members and $20 for nonmembers online
Michelle Millar Fisher, the MFA’s Ronald and Anita Wornick Curator of Contemporary Decorative Arts, looks closely at the pivotal time Puryear spent as a student in Scandinavia in the mid-1960s, and considers his rich and complex relationship with contemporary craft.
Martin Puryear’s Liberties
October 11
$28 for members and $35 for nonmembers in person, $16 for members and $20 for nonmembers online
Ian Alteveer, the MFA’s Beal Family Chair, Contemporary Art, considers the artist’s complex use of rich materials and media, and the ways his works describe a history of the forms he has encountered through a lifetime of movement, research, and study.
First Fridays
October 3 and January 2
Free for members and $27 for nonmembers
Held in the 465 Bar and Restaurant, the MFA’s First Fridays are exciting evenings of dancing, art making, and music by resident DJ Slick Vick. In October, the Museum partners with the Teachers’ Lounge to mark the opening of Martin Puryear: Nexus with Spotlight Talks and games hosted by Playing Games With. In January, the MFA and the City of Boston celebrate the exhibition with Boston Poet Laureate Emmanuel Oppong-Yeboah.
Looking Together: Conversations with Contemporary Art
October 9–30
$128 for members, $160 for nonmembers
Barbara Martin, Alfond Curator Emerita of Education, leads guided gallery discussions exploring works on view in Martin Puryear: Nexus and other contemporary installations at the MFA. Through close observation and lively conversation, participants are encouraged to discuss connections contemporary artists make across art history.
Billie Tsien: A Rock in the Water
January 29
$12 for members and $15 for nonmembers
In this Esther Steinberg Memorial Lecture, renowned architect Billie Tsien, who contributed to the exhibition catalogue, explores the ever-present dichotomies in her work—a wish for permanence and an acknowledgment of change. Drawing on her personal experience, artistic collaborations, and experience designing buildings, Tsien will discuss how she creates placed centered on experience and how her process has evolved over time.
Announcements about public programming at the CMA and the High are forthcoming.
Exhibition Catalogue
Martin Puryear: Nexus is accompanied by an expansive and richly illustrated catalogue. Designed and published by the Cleveland Museum of Art, with distribution by Yale University Press, the publication is anchored by five essays authored by a new generation of scholars: Rizvana Bradley, Joan Kee, Emily Liebert, Michelle Millar Fisher, and Ugochukwu-Smooth Nzewi.
Additional perspectives enter the book through series of responses to individual works, contributed by thinkers and makers from a range of disciplines, many of whom are long-time interlocutors of the artist. They include Nairy Baghramian, Alex Da Corte, Thelma Golden, Maya Lin, Kerry James Marshall, Julia Phillips, Charles Ray, and Billie Tsien. Alongside these contemporary perspectives, the catalogue features archival materials that have never before been published.
About Martin Puryear
Over the past five decades, Martin Puryear has created a body of work based on abstract organic forms rich with psychological, cultural, and historical references. His labor-intensive sculptures are made by hand at his studio in upstate New York. They combine practices adapted from many different traditions, including wood carving, joinery, and boat building, as well as more recent technology. As a student, Puryear studied ornithology, falconry, and archery, and in the 1960s he volunteered with the Peace Corps in west Africa, where he was exposed to the region’s Indigenous crafts. Since then he has continued to travel extensively, observing a range of cultures and their unique approaches to object making. “I think there are a number of levels at which my work can be dealt with and appreciated,” he has said. “It gives me pleasure to feel there’s a level that doesn’t require knowledge of or immersion in the aesthetic of a given time or place.”
Puryear was born in Washington, D.C., in 1941. His first one-person exhibition took place in 1968, and since then he has exhibited throughout the world, including public commissions in Europe, Asia, and the U.S. His work was featured in Documenta 9, and in 1989 he represented the U.S. at the Bienal de São Paulo, where he was awarded the festival’s Grand Prize. In 2007, the Museum of Modern Art in New York organized a survey of his work, which traveled to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. In 2015, the Art Institute of Chicago organized an exhibition of 50 years of his works on paper, which traveled to the Morgan Library and Museum in New York and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. Puryear received a MacArthur Foundation award in 1989 and a National Medal of Arts from President Obama in 2011. In 2019 he represented the U.S. at the 58th Venice Biennale. His recent commissions include outdoor works at Madison Square Park, the Storm King Art Center, and the Deichman Library in Oslo.
Sponsors: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Martin Puryear: Nexus is sponsored by the Abrams Foundation.
Generous support is provided by the Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation, the Terra Foundation for American Art, the Henry and Lois Foster Fund for Contemporary Exhibitions, the Henry Luce Foundation, and Delta Air Lines.
Additional support is provided by Katie and Paul Buttenwieser, Key Private Bank in memory of Graham Gund, Davis and Carol Noble, the Callaghan Family Fund for Contemporary Exhibitions, the Amy and Jonathan Poorvu Fund for the Exhibition of Contemporary Art and Sculpture, the Robert and Jane Burke Fund for Exhibitions, and the Barbara Jane Anderson Fund.
The exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Sponsors: The Cleveland Museum of Art
Principal support is provided by Agnes Gund, the Henry Luce Foundation, the Terra Foundation for American Art, and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Generous support is provided by the Gottlob family in loving memory of Milford Gottlob, MD and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional support is provided by Kenneth H. Kirtz and family.
All exhibitions at the Cleveland Museum of Art are underwritten by the CMA Fund for Exhibitions.
Principal support for the exhibition catalogue is provided by the Glenstone Foundation.
About the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
The MFA brings many worlds together through art. Showcasing masterpieces from ancient to contemporary, our renowned collection of more than half a million works tells a multifaceted story of the human experience—a story that holds unique meaning for everyone. From Boston locals to international travelers, visitors from all over come to experience the MFA—where they reveal connections, explore differences and create a community where all belong.
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About the Cleveland Museum of Art
The Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) is renowned for the quality and breadth of its collection, which includes more than 66,500 artworks and spans 6,000 years of achievement in the arts. The museum is a significant international forum for exhibitions, scholarship, and performing arts and is a leader in digital innovation. One of the leading encyclopedic art museums in the United States, the CMA is recognized for its award-winning open access program—which provides free digital access to images and information about works in the museum’s collection—and free of charge to all. The museum is located in the University Circle neighborhood with two satellite locations on Cleveland’s west side: the Community Arts Center and Transformer Station.
The museum is supported in part by residents of Cuyahoga County through a public grant from Cuyahoga Arts & Culture and made possible in part by the Ohio Arts Council (OAC), which receives support from the State of Ohio and the National Endowment for the Arts. The OAC is a state agency that funds and supports quality arts experiences to strengthen Ohio communities culturally, educationally, and economically. For more information about the museum and its holdings, programs, and events, call 888-CMA-0033 or visit cma.org
Open six days a week, the CMA’s hours are Tuesday through Sunday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.; Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday; and Wednesday, Friday 10:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m. Plan your visit at cma.org.