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© Museum Associates 2026
Collections

Dora De Larios
Ocean2009

On view:
Geffen Galleries, floor 1
Tall ceramic column with ocean-themed relief decoration in cobalt, turquoise, and sky blue glazes, topped with a gold sunburst disk, on a black tile base
Artist or Maker
Dora De Larios
United States, California, Los Angeles, 1933-2018
Title
Ocean
Date Made
2009
Medium
Glazed porcelain, aluminum, brass, wood
Dimensions
Overall: 108 × 37 × 25 in. (274.32 × 93.98 × 63.5 cm) a) Head: 23 1/4 × 20 1/2 × 6 in. (59.06 × 52.07 × 15.24 cm) b) Body (smaller part): 28 × 28 3/4 × 17 in. (71.12 × 73.03 × 43.18 cm) c) Body (larger part): 58 3/4 × 36 3/4 × 24 7/8 in. (149.23 × 93.35 × 63.18 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of the artist
Accession Number
M.2017.182.2a-b
Classification
Sculpture
Collecting Area
Decorative Arts and Design
Curatorial Notes

Beginning in the 1980s, Los Angeles artist Dora De Larios began to explore goddess imagery in her work. Confronting the challenges she faced as a Mexican American woman in a ceramic art field dominated by white men, she drew on ancient mythologies of powerful female figures in a series of deeply personal sculptures. Born in L.A. to Mexican immigrant parents, De Larios was deeply influenced by the diverse city, infusing works like the goddesses with ancient ceramic traditions from her Mexican heritage, as well as those of the cultures and artistic movements that surrounded her in Southern California.

De Larios created Ocean Goddess, along with the related Air Goddess (M.2017.182.1a-b), Earth Goddess (M.2022.200a-b), and Water Goddess (M.2017.182.3a-b), for her 2009 retrospective at the Craft and Folk Art Museum in Los Angeles (now Craft Contemporary). These powerful totems embody the spirit of the natural elements through both abstract and representational symbols.

Staci Steinberger

2017/2022

Copyright
© Dora De Larios

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