Nest Egg merges the organic and the economic. A universal form tied to life and renewal, the egg is recast here in forged steel and gold chromium, transforming the familiar into an object of commerce, accumulation, and exchange. The work reflects on how value is constructed and measured—whether in natural forms, financial markets, or cultural icons.
In 2015, Picasso’s Women of Algiers (Version ‘O’) sold for $179.3 million, exceeding the GDP of several nations. Within this context, Nest Egg asks whether worth is inherent in the object itself, the systems that assign its price, or the collective faith that sustains both. At the same time, it plays on the artist–collector relationship: the artist trades a sculptural Nest Egg for the collector’s financial one.
Catalogue Description
Brendon McNaughton’s Nest Egg situates itself at the intersection of the natural and the financial, transforming one of the most essential biological forms into an object of wealth, commerce, and speculation. Forged in steel and finished in gold chromium, the sculpture conflates ideas of fertility, renewal, and preservation with those of accumulation, exchange, and legacy.
The work resonates with a long lineage of art objects tied to capital and patronage. From the Renaissance patron’s commission, where works of art functioned simultaneously as devotional objects and symbols of dynastic power, to Fabergé’s Imperial Eggs, crafted as dazzling emblems of luxury and political prestige, the egg has recurrently served as a vessel of both symbolic and economic value. McNaughton extends this trajectory into the contemporary era, in which financial markets and the art world are increasingly entwined.
Consider Pablo Picasso’s Women of Algiers (Version ‘O’), which realized $179.3 million at auction in 2015—an amount exceeding the GDP of several sovereign nations that year. Such juxtapositions reveal the extremes of global disparity, where a single canvas can outweigh the economic output of millions of lives. Within this context, Nest Egg becomes more than a polished sculptural form; it is a mirror of systemic imbalances and the faith placed in objects, currencies, and commodities to hold and transmit value.
At the same time, the work stages a subtle exchange between artist and collector. In acquiring the sculpture, the collector relinquishes part of their own financial “nest egg,” trading accumulated capital for a cultural asset intended to preserve or even augment value across generations. McNaughton thus replays, in contemporary terms, the historical cycle in which art has functioned as both aesthetic achievement and financial instrument.
Nest Egg ultimately poses a question that is as art historical as it is economic: is value intrinsic to the form itself, or does it reside in the systems—markets, patrons, collectors—that endow objects with meaning and price? By materializing this tension, McNaughton situates his practice within an evolving dialogue on commerce, accumulation, and the fragile architectures of value.