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Joel Morrison — Sausage Head
Joel Morrison

Sausage Head

Sausage Head presents a stainless steel form that is at once absurd and formally rigorous, a sculpted mass in which the body is reduced to something simultaneously grotesque and oddly tender. Joel Morrison works within a tradition of object-based sculpture that questions the boundary between the high and the low, and this piece exemplifies that tension with particular economy. The mirrored surface of the steel throws the viewer's own reflection back in distorted fragments, implicating the act of looking in something playful and slightly unsettling. At just under forty centimeters in each dimension, the work commands presence well beyond its compact scale. Morrison, who emerged from the Los Angeles art scene in the early 2000s, has built a body of work around found consumer objects, industrial materials, and the vocabulary of the body. Sausage Head fits squarely within that practice while also standing as a self-contained statement. The title's blunt humor is not incidental but structural, steering the viewer toward a reading of the form as corporeal and deflating any temptation toward purely formalist interpretation. The polished finish references minimalist sculpture while the subject matter refuses its cool detachment entirely. For the collector, this work offers a rare combination of conceptual depth and immediate visual wit. Its signed status and modest footprint make it highly versatile within a private collection, capable of holding its own in dialogue with both contemporary ceramics and harder-edged sculptural work. Offered through Alex Daniels, Reflex Amsterdam, it represents a considered point of entry into Morrison's practice at a scale that brings the work into intimate relationship with its surroundings.

Medium
Stainless steel
Overall
Signed
Yes

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About this work

Joel Morrison, Sausage Head

Sausage Head presents a stainless steel form that is at once absurd and formally rigorous, a sculpted mass in which the body is reduced to something simultaneously grotesque and oddly tender. Joel Morrison works within a tradition of object-based sculpture that questions the boundary between the high and the low, and this piece exemplifies that tension with particular economy. The mirrored surface of the steel throws the viewer's own reflection back in distorted fragments, implicating the act of looking in something playful and slightly unsettling. At just under forty centimeters in each dimension, the work commands presence well beyond its compact scale. Morrison, who emerged from the Los Angeles art scene in the early 2000s, has built a body of work around found consumer objects, industrial materials, and the vocabulary of the body. Sausage Head fits squarely within that practice while also standing as a self-contained statement. The title's blunt humor is not incidental but structural, steering the viewer toward a reading of the form as corporeal and deflating any temptation toward purely formalist interpretation. The polished finish references minimalist sculpture while the subject matter refuses its cool detachment entirely. For the collector, this work offers a rare combination of conceptual depth and immediate visual wit. Its signed status and modest footprint make it highly versatile within a private collection, capable of holding its own in dialogue with both contemporary ceramics and harder-edged sculptural work. Offered through Alex Daniels, Reflex Amsterdam, it represents a considered point of entry into Morrison's practice at a scale that brings the work into intimate relationship with its surroundings.

Medium
Stainless steel
Dimensions
overall: 39.4 x 38.1 x 47 cm
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Alex Daniels - Reflex Amsterdam

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Mohn Art Collective

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