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David Zwirner is pleased to present 6 works, 6 rooms, an exhibition
featuring seminal Minimal and Conceptual works by Dan Flavin, On Kawara, Sol LeWitt,
John McCracken, Fred Sandback, and Richard Serra. In a sparse installation that
spreads across David Zwirner’s main galleries at 525 and 533 West 19th Street,
one work by each artist is installed in its own exhibition space, thus
exploring the experiential possibilities of the works on view without
distraction. While they also affect the viewer’s physical or mental engagement,
the individual works in the exhibition uniquely activate the spaces in which
they are installed—for instance, through light (Flavin); reflection
(McCracken); gravity (Serra); void/presence (Sandback); conceptually (LeWitt);
or contemplatively (Kawara).
Five of the works on view reflect the shift in the formal concerns of sculpture
that took place in the 1960s and 70s, where Minimal and Conceptual artists
abandoned illusionism, reducing the components of sculpture to elementary,
basic forms that questioned and shared the real space of the viewer or which
revealed the processes of their making.
Richard Serra’s Corner Prop, 1969, for instance, experiments with gravity,
process, and structure using the walls of the exhibition space to help suspend
a heavy lead cube that is ‘propped’ against a corner by a rolled lead pole.
This early work by the artist is the direct result of an action indexed in his
legendary Verb List (1967-68): taking his distance with the prescriptions of
classic sculpture, Serra enacted a series of transitive verbs (to lift, to
fold, to prop, etc.) to create sculptures that served as the physical
manifestations of clearly-defined procedures. In the artist’s words: “I
realized that lead, with its low order of entropy, was a gravitybound
material…My prop pieces are predicated on balance and equilibrium (no permanent
joints)…These pieces utilizing the floor and the wall retained a memory of
pictorial concerns even though their content was predicated on their axiomatic
building principles.
Simultaneously activating and diffusing the corner of a room, Dan Flavin’s
monument 4 for those who have been killed in ambush (to P.K. who reminded me
about death), 1966, dramatically bathes the space in which it is installed in
red fluorescent light. Here, an armature of 8-foot and 6-foot lamps projects
out of the corner of the room in a kind of cross-bow formation. The work’s evocative
title, which memorializes those killed in the Vietnam War, contrasts with the
Minimalist principles at work in Flavin’s art. He has noted, “I came to these
conclusions about what I had found in fluorescent light, about what might be
done with it plastically. Now the entire room, the interior spatial container
and its parts: wall, floor and ceiling, could support this strip of light, but
would not restrict its active light except
to enfold it. Realizing this, I knew that the actual space of a room could be
broken down and played with…[My art can be understood as] a sequence of
implicit decisions to combine traditions of painting and sculpture in
architecture with acts of electric light defining space.”2
The exhibition will include an early example of Sol LeWitt’s “Modular
Structures,” a series of sculptures originated from the idea of the cube as a
primary modular unit. In Wall/Floor Piece (“Three Squares”), 1966, three
identical steel square structures are placed in a corner, one on each wall and
one on the floor. Logically, this work evokes the volume of a cube, without
physically forming it completely: “LeWitt's open modular cubes, inviting
viewing from all directions, apportion their internal space into equal spatial
segments that have no external barrier or façade.”3 Here, the sides of the cube
represent three spatial dimensions, each square standing in for one of the
spatial planes of the “white cube” of the exhibition room. Painted white, this
work seems to integrate with the exhibition space while also calling it into
question.
A large-scale work by Fred Sandback will occupy one of the main exhibition
spaces at the gallery. Though he employed metal wire and elastic cord early in
his career, the artist soon dispensed with mass and weight by using acrylic
yarn to create works that address their physical surroundings, the “pedestrian
space,” as Sandback called it, of everyday life. By stretching lengths of yarn
horizontally, vertically, or diagonally at different scales and in varied
configurations, the artist outlined planes and volumes in space, thus
developing a singular body of work that elaborated on the phenomenological
experience of space and volume. Untitled (Sculptural Study, Five-part
Construction), 1987/2009, is composed from twenty lengths of black acrylic yarn
which form the outlines of one freestanding square and four freestanding
rectangles. The five elements are installed perpendicular and parallel to
the surrounding walls, creating the impression of three-dimensional spaces
within the exhibition space, while engaging the tension between presence and
void.
In keeping with the glossy, colored geometric forms he has best become known
for, the surfaces of John McCracken’s mirrored bronze sculptures are both, as
the artist describes, “materialist and transcendentalist.” A highly-reflective,
freestanding rectangular bronze block, Swift, 2007, maintains its monolithic
status while bordering on invisibility. As Eva Wittocx has noted, McCracken’s
mirrored volumes “catch images and immediately return them to their source.
Like a range of optical instruments, the sculptures produce images of what can
be seen around them. They appear to examine the surrounding space, turn it
around and cut off a segment of it […and] absorb their surroundings.
The exhibition will include an early example of On Kawara’s “Today Series,” an
ongoing body of work begun by the artist in 1966. JUNE 19, 1967 invites the
viewer to contemplate the passage of time and the nature of consciousness: this
painting bears only the date of its making, meticulously announced in white
letters and numerals on a monochromatic, red surface. Following the same basic
procedure and format, each painting from the “Today Series” is carefully
executed by hand with the date documented in the language and grammatical
conventions of the country in which it is made, uniformly painted in a sans
serif typeface. The paintings conform to one of eight standard sizes, ranging
from 8 x 10 inches to 61 x 89 inches. When available, a local newspaper clipping
is used to line the interior of a cardboard box that encases the paintings when
not on display. On Kawara, as Jonathan Watkins has noted, “regards the process
of making the ‘date paintings’ as a form of meditation, a routine conducive to
the loss of ego and distractions from fundamental truths equally if not more
evident to our illiterate forebears. However, the vehicle for the meditation is
not without distinguishing features or focus and these can be articulated. The
date is about time, and surely and ultimately about human mortality.
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1966, White lacquered steel in three (3) parts , 29 1/2 x 29 1/2 x 1 5/8 inches (each) 74.9 x 74.9 x 4.1 cm Overall dimensions vary with each installation
sculpture, conceptual