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Home Sweet Home
Home Sweet Home
Home Sweet Home
Home Sweet Home, John M. Mitchell, n. d., Savannah Grey brick, wood, glass, leather, string, fabric, porcelain, oil paint, mother-of-pearl, adhesive, metal, resin, and paper, Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah, Georgia, © John M. Mitchell.

Home Sweet Home

Artist (American, born 1942)
Datebefore 1999
MediumSavannah Grey brick, wood, glass, leather, string, fabric, porcelain, oil paint, mother-of-pearl, adhesive, metal, resin, and paper
Dimensions47 5/8 × 28 1/4 × 14 5/8 inches (121 × 71.8 × 37.1 cm)
Credit LineGift of Larry D. and Brenda T. Thompson.
Object number2021.3
On View
Not on view
Copyright© John M. Mitchell. The images and text contained on this page are owned by Telfair Museums or used by the Museum with permission from the owners. Unauthorized reproduction, transmission or display of these materials is prohibited with the exception of items deemed “fair use” as defined by U.S. and international copyright laws. Label TextSavannah-based artist John Mitchell believes that a home is more than a simple edifice. Rather, he argues that the sociological, psychological, architectural, and historical associations embedded in the structure “tell us about our culture, our lives. It tells us about where we come from.” Mitchell grew up in a shotgun house in North Carolina, a style of vernacular architecture that is particularly prevalent in the South. Mitchell fills his sculptural homes with objects of metaphorical and symbolic importance. In Home Sweet Home he includes the American flag, a photograph of Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, and a china plate depicting The Last Supper, among other items that convey a personal and historical narrative. He notes that making art acts “as a ‘record’ of experiences. My bittersweet past, growing up in the segregated South, inspires the content, focus, and narrative of my work.” Text written for the exhibition Complex Uncertainties: Artists in Postwar America, Rotation 10, May 6, 2021-May 1, 2022.