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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Art News > American sculptor Melvin Edwards dies at 88.
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American sculptor Melvin Edwards dies at 88.

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 2 April 2026 00:27
Published 2 April 2026
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American sculptor Melvin Edwards, known for his Minimalist works that incorporate industrial materials to confront and interrogate the history of violence in the United States, died in Baltimore at 88 on March 29th. His gallery, Alexander Gray Associates, confirmed his passing.

Edwards is perhaps best known for his “Lynch Fragments,” a series of steel sculptures that use metal chains, pipes, barbed wire, beams, and hooks to evoke the history of social, physical, and geopolitical violence. The titles of his works often signaled the artist’s subject matter, such as Nam (1973), featured in the Memorial Art Gallery in New York, or Justice for Tropic-Ana (dedicated to Ana Mendieta) (1986), featured in Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Museum of Art.

Born in Houston in 1937, Edwards expressed an early interest in art. His father, an amateur artist, gifted him a painting easel when he was 14 years old. Most of his childhood was spent in Texas, and he moved to San Diego in 1955 for Navy Reserve training before relocating to Los Angeles two weeks later. There, he played football at Los Angeles City College and the University of Southern California, from which he graduated with a bachelor’s in painting in 1965.

Before graduating from USC, Edwards married painter Karen Hamre, with whom he would have three children. That same year, the artist learned to weld, a technique that would come to define the most important artworks of his career. In 1963, Edwards began the “Lynch Fragments” series with the wall-mounted sculpture Some Bright Morning. The inaugural work, which draws its title from publisher and writer Ralph Ginzburg’s 1962 book 100 Years of Lynching, features a chain made from several amalgamated pieces of battered steel. The series ranged from small works, measuring a foot long, to massive, imposing sculptures up to eight feet—all of which were equally arresting.

Edwards moved to New York City in 1967, where he immersed himself in the Minimalist and abstract art scenes, befriending artists like Sam Gilliam and William T. Williams. In 1970, the artist staged a solo show at the Whitney Museum of American Art. The very next year, the artist withdrew work from a museum group show after the institution refused to include his essay criticizing its history of sidelining Black artists.

Despite finding early success at some of the most prestigious institutions, including the Walker Art Center and The Studio Museum in Harlem, Edwards did not secure a commercial gallery show until 1990 with New York’s CDS Gallery. Meanwhile, the artist was on the faculty of Rutgers University from 1972 to 2002.

In recent years, Edwards has earned widespread recognition. In 2021, the artist installed major sculptures in New York’s City Hall Park, including Song of the Broken Chains (2021) and Homage to Coco (2021). In 2015, the Nasher Sculpture Center in Texas mounted his retrospective. Meanwhile, Alexander Gray Associates has regularly shown the artist’s work since 2010, with his latest solo exhibition in 2024.

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