The Cleveland Museum of Art

Collection Online as of July 8, 2026

A horizontally oriented crayon drawing rendered in muted pastel colors features a large spiral winding outward from the center. Broad bands of soft pink, orange, pale yellow, and cool gray shift gradually through textured, visible strokes. The form is centered on the light paper, with the outermost ring reaching the top and bottom edges while leaving narrow, blank margins on the left and right of the composition.

4 Tyrna

1973
(American, b. 1936)
Sheet: 27.9 x 35.6 cm (11 x 14 in.)
© Athena Tacha
Location: Not on view

Did You Know?

This drawing belongs to a series that is one of several works in which Tacha has explored imagery of spirals throughout her career.

Description

Born in Greece, Athena Tacha studied in Paris before obtaining advanced degrees in both art history and fine art. She eventually settled in Oberlin, Ohio, where she served as both the first curator of modern art for Oberlin College’s Allen Memorial Art Museum, and later as a professor of sculpture for several decades. Around this time, she began to create site-specific environmental sculpture—the medium for which she is best known. In her exploratory series of drawings, Spirals, Tacha used various media to render layered circular forms on sketchbook paper. The works represent a theme that recurred throughout the artist’s work throughout her career, and one that she once described as recalling shells and galaxies.
  • {{cite web|title=4 Tyrna|url=false|author=Athena Tacha|year=1973|access-date=08 July 2026|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}

Source URL:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2025.211.2