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Minimal Art, Post-Minimal, and Conceptual Art
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Joseph Kosuth, One and Three Chairs, 1965
Joseph Kosuth, One and Three Chairs, 1965, wooden folding chair, photographic copy of a chair and photographic enlargement of a dictionary definition of a chair Joseph Kosuth, One and Three Chairs, 1965
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Installation view of the 1970 Information exhibition, MoMA NYC, which marks the institutional “success” of text-based Conceptual art documented by photographs.
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Dennis Oppenheim, Reading Position for Second Degree Burn, 1970, Stage 1 and Stage 2, book, skin, solar energy, exposure time 5 hours, Jones Beach, New York, color photography and collage, 216 x 152 cm . Photographs “were there simply to indicate a radical art that had already vanished….necessary only as a residue for communication.”
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Bruce Nauman, Eating My Words, and Self-Portrait as a Fountain, from Eleven Color Photographs, 1966/67-70, chromogenic color print / performed for the camera only
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John Baldessari (United States, b
John Baldessari (United States, b. 1931) (“Father” of Pictures Generation”) (left) Wrong, , acrylic, photo-emulsion on canvas, 59 x 45 in. (right) Astronauts and Businessmen, 1988 , photograph with applied paint, Museum of Fine Art, Houston
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Ed Ruscha (U.S. b. 1937), Flying A, Kingman, Arizona, from Twentysix Gasoline Stations, 1963, photographic book, sold for $3.50 Minimalist and California Pop (anti)aesthetic: serial repetition and deadpan view of contemporary reality Book cover
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Through his deliberate lack of style, Ruscha draws attention “to the estranged relationship of people to their rural environment, but without staging or dramatizing the estrangement.” Compare Ruscha’s (1963) vision of the American West (above) with Ansel Adams’ interpretation based on 19th century Romantic landscape aesthetics, (right) Moonrise over Hernandez, NM. October 31, Adams made “Art” and did not work in other media.
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The artist’s road trip from California to Oaklahoma
Ansel Adams, Grand Tetons and the Snake River, 1942 The artist’s road trip from California to Oaklahoma Albert Bierstadt, The Rocky Mountains, 1863
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Ed Ruscha, Standard Station, Amarillo, Texas, 1963, oil on canvas, 5’5” x 10’
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Ed Ruscha took the photographs of Sunset Strip with a motorized Nikon camera mounted to the back of a pick-up truck. This allowed him to photograph every building while driving – first down one side of the street and then the other. The pictures were then pasted in order they were shot, and the individual buildings were labeled with their respective address numbers.
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Ed Ruscha, The Old Trade School Building, 2005, synthetic polymer on canvas 54 x 120 in, from The Course of Empire Series, US Pavilion, Venice Biennale, (bottom) Blue Collar Trade School, 1992, Synthetic polymer on canvas, 54 x 120
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Robert Smithson, “A Tour of the Monuments of Passaic, New Jersey,” from Artforum, vol.6, no.4, December 1967, pp
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Robert Smithson (American Environmental Artist, ), Spiral Jetty, 1970, Great Salt Lake. Earthwork
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Hans Haacke, detail of Shapolsky et al, Manhattan Real Estate Holdings, a Real Time System as of May 1, 1971, 1971, two enlarged photographs, 142 black and white photographs with typewritten data sheets, six charts and one explanatory panel
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Bernhard and Hilla Becher Conceptual (typological) photography (left) Gas Tanks, (right) Water Towers, 1980, 9 b/w photographs mounted on board, 62inH overall
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Thomas Struth (German, b
Thomas Struth (German, b. 1954), Sommerstrasse, Düsseldorf, 1980, Gelatin silver print, 16 1/2 x 22 1/2 in., Dallas Museum of Art
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Thomas Struth (Germany, b
Thomas Struth (Germany, b.1954, student of Bechers) Shinju-ku (Skyscrapers), Tokyo, (right) Ferdinand-von-Schill-Strasse, Dessau, 1991
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Candida Höfer (Germany, 1944, student of Bechers) (left) Stiftsbibliothek Klosterneuburg III, 2003, C-print, 68 in. H Ca' Rezzonico Venezia II, 2003, C-print, 74 in. Width
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Thomas Ruff (German, b. 1958), House #9 II, 1991, 72 in
Thomas Ruff (German, b.1958), House #9 II, 1991, 72 in. H one of series taken in early morning, apartment blocks in Eastern Germany
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Thomas Ruff, (left) Portrait, 1989, 63in
Thomas Ruff, (left) Portrait, 1989, 63in. H (center and right) from Portrait series, 2001, conceptual typologies “absolute objectivity” like passport photos except for scale '... Like archetypal passport photos... young people with dead eyes and empty faces.' Ruff
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Martha Rosler, detail of The Bowery in Two Inadequate Descriptive Systems, 1974, 45 black and white photographs mounted on 24 mat-board panels, each panel 25 x 56 cm
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Compare the following piece from today’s NY Times…
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Barbara Kruger (U.S. b. 1945), (left) Untitled (Your Gaze Hits the Side of My Face), 1981, gelatin silver print, 72 x 48 in.; (right) Untitled (I Shop Therefore I Am), “Pictures Generation”
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2008 New York Times slide show: Rosler talking about her work 1960’s-2008 Martha Rosler (US, 1943) Cleaning the Drapes, from series, Bringing the War Home: House Beautiful,
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Cindy Sherman (US, b.1954) Untitled Film Still #27, film stills from 1977 (23 years old) to She stopped making film stills, she has explained, when she ran out of clichés.
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"She's good enough to be a real actress.“ Andy Warhol
Cindy Sherman, (left) Untitled Film Still #35, 1979; (right) Untitled Film Still # The Museum of Modern Art, New York. 8 x 10” glossies just like “real” film stills. "She's good enough to be a real actress.“ Andy Warhol
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Cindy Sherman, (left) Untitled Film Still #37, (right) UFS #13, 1979
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(left) Cindy Sherman, Untitled #188, Chromogenic color print, 43 ½ x 65 ½,“ (right) Hans Bellmer (German, ) 'Poupee' (Doll) in Hayloft, (historical source for Sherman)
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(left) Sherrie Levine (US Postmodern Appropriation artist, b
(left) Sherrie Levine (US Postmodern Appropriation artist, b.1947) Untitled (After Alexander Rodchenko: 9), (right) Alexander Rodchenko (Russian Constructivist, avant-garde modernist), ), Portrait of Mother, 1924 Postmodern “Appropriation” of “high” art challenged modernism’s key values of “originality” and “aura.” Key text: Walter Benjamin, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”
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(left) Sherrie Levine, After Walker Evans, 1981 – a photograph of reproduction of a photograph (right) Walker Evans, Hale County, Alabama, (Or is it the other way around?) Key text: Rosalind Krauss: “The Originality of the Avant-garde and other Modernist Myths” Post-structuralism – postmodern revision of modern theory
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Richard Prince (American, born 1949), Untitled (four single men with interchangeable backgrounds looking to the right), 1977, Mixed media on paper, 23 x 19 in. Metropolitan Museum, NYC
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Richard Prince, (left) Untitled (cowboy), 1981, Ektacolor photograph, 20 x 24 in (right) Untitled (cowboy) , Ektacolor photograph, 27 x 40 in. “Pictures Generation” appropriation from mass visual culture: advertising photography
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Louise Lawler (American, born 1947), Pollock and Tureen, Arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Burton Tremaine, Connecticut, 1984, silver dye bleach print, 28 x 39 in.
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Jeff Wall (Canadian, 1946), Picture for Women, 1979 transparency in light box, approx. 5 x 7ft
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(left) Jeff Wall, Picture for Women, transparency in lightbox, 1979, around 5ft x 7ft; compare (right) Edouard Manet, A Bar at the Folies-Bergère, oil on canvas, 1882 / Art historical quotation is characteristically postmodern.
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(left) Jeff Wall, Picture for Women, transparency in lightbox, 1979, around 5ft x 7ft; compare (right) Diego Velazquez (Spanish Baroque), Las Meninas, scale, complex composition drawing attention to the unity of reality and illusion, uncertain relationship between the viewer and the figures depicted.
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Jeff Wall (Canada, b. 1946) Installation view of the exhibition Documenta 8, Kassel, Germany, 1987, showing The Storyteller, cibachrome transparency, lightbox, 1986
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Jeff Wall, A Sudden Gust of Wind (After Hokusai), transparency in light-box, 1993, 7ft x 12ft. Hokusai, Ejiri in Suruga Province c , woodblock print from series, 36 Views of Fuji, 26 x 38 cm
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Felix Gonzalez-Torres (American b. Cuba NYC 1996), Untitled, As installed for The Museum of Modern Art, New York "Projects 34: Felix Gonzalez-Torres“ May 16 - June 30, 1992: 2 of 24 locations throughout New York City "EMERGING WOR(L)DS": June October 2008: Gonzalez-Torres represented the United States at the 2007 Venice Biennale
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Christian Boltanski (French, b
Christian Boltanski (French, b. 1944) Jewish School of Grosse Hamburgstrasse in Berlin in 1939, 1991, moving photographs, fans, florescent lamps, dimensions variable Christian Boltanski at the Grand Palais, Monumenta 2010 Monument (Odessa), , gelatin silver prints, tin biscuit boxes, lights, and wire
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Minimalism In the eighties there is a marked shift in the reception of photography that deghettoizes the practice from being a practice parallel to painting and sculpture to one that is today on parwith these expressions. This change is grounded in conceptual art, where photography was used to document actions and ideas, and thus became part of the artist’s expression, rather than the photographer’s expression. In the works were about to look at we think today of these practitioners as artists who use photography rather than as photographers. We will see that the conceptual thread wound in the seventies continues through all of these eighties works. It is also important to consider that these artists we are about to look at have less interest in making photographic images, than in showing the construction and betraying our conventions for looking at those images. These works become constructed pictures full of legible signs that the artists call to our attention.
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Robert Morris “…the significant artist strives to reduce the technical and psychical distance between his artistic output and the productive means of society. Duchamp, Warhol, and Robert Morris are similarly directed in this respect.” Jack Burnham, Systems Esthetics, 1969 Robert Morris, Box with the Sound of Its Own Making, 1961
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Tony Smith Not typically associated with Minimalism, Tony Smith nevertheless created one of the most enduring icons of the minimalist esthetic., Die. It was supposedly inspired by an index card file, but its scale (72 x 72 x 72 inches) and fabrication were a response to an advertisement for the Industrial Welding Company in Newark, New Jersey, which read: “You specify it: we fabricate it.” The dimensions, according to Smith, were determined by the human body, as in Leonardo da Vinci’s drawing of the Vitruvian man, whose outstretched arms and legs are inscribed within a circle and a square. Smith said that larger dimensions would have implied the work was a “monument,” while smaller ones would have reduced it to the role of a mere “object.” This observation became the subject of key debates among the philosophers of the minimal-art generation, including Robert Morris and Michael Fried. Smith’s deceptively simple title has multiple allusions: to industry (die casting), to chance (roll of the dice) and to death, as implied in the title and based on Smith’s other observation, “Six foot box. Six foot under.” Tony Smith, “Die,” 1962/68, Steel, overall 72 x 72 x72 inches
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Larry Bell Larry Bell, “Untitled,” anodized glass, 1975
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Sol Lewitt (b. 1928) creates simple forms in series like white or black cubes, either open or closed. Although he later added primary colors, LeWitt stresses that art should “engage the mind rather than the eye or emotions.”
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Donald Judd, Untitled, 1969
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Robert Morris, Untitled, 1967
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Solid Geometry Minimalist, like Hard Edge painters, eradicated the individual’s handprint, as well as any emotion, image, or message. To attain such a “pure,” anonymous effect, they used prefab materials in simple geometric shapes like metal boxes or bricks. Carl Andre, “Sulcus,” 1980 Western red cedar wood overall 150 x 90 x 90 cm
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Carl Andre (b. 1935) went to the opposite extreme from traditional vertical, figurative sculpture on a pedestal. Instead, he arranged bricks, cement blocks, and flat slabs on the floor in a horizontal configuration, as in his 29 –foot-long row of bricks on the ground. Equivalent VIII Copper Galaxy
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Metal shelves attached to a gallery wall, panes of glass on a gallery floor, a plank leaning against a wall are all Minimalist art. The ultimate Minimalist exhibit was French artist Yves Klein’s show of nothing at all, just a freshly whitewashed gallery containing no object or painting (two patrons even bought nonexistent canvases – Klein demanded payment in gold). “Compared to them,” art dealer Leo Castelli said, “Mondrian is an expressionist painter.” For these sculptors, minimum form ensured maximum intensity. By taking away “distractions” like detail, imagery, and narrative – i.e., everything – they forced the viewer to pay total attention to what’s left. “Simplicity of shape does not necessarily equate with simplicity of experience,” said Robert Morris
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Dan Flavin (b. 1933) sculpts with light, attaching fluorescent tubes to the wall in stark geometric designs giving off fields of color. Hint: Look at the light, not at the tubes.
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Robert Morriss (b. 1931) is known for large-scale, hard-edge geometric sculptures like big, blocky right angles. “Unitary forms do not reduce relationships,” he said. “They order them/.” Morris also does antiform sculpture in soft, hanging material like felt. The pieces droop on the wall, sculpted by gravity. His “Untitled” sculpture is a great example of Minimalism. Made in the years of , the sculpture consists of four mirror plated glass and wood cubes arranged as if they had been placed in the four corners of a square. Robert Morris, installation in the Green Gallery, New York, Seven geometric plywood structures painted grey.
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Robert Morris, Untitled (L Beams), 1965
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Robert Morris, Untitled 1969 felt 284.0 (h) x 363.2 (w) x 111.8 (d) cm
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Robert Morris, Untitled 1969 felt 284.0 (h) x 363.2 (w) x 111.8 (d) cm
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Claes Oldenburg, French Fries, 1966
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Eva Hesse, Accesion, 1969
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Robert Morris, Untitled, felt, 1967
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Robert Morris, Untitled, felt, 1970
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Richard Serra Art 21 Season 1
(b. 1939) became infamous for his huge metal sculpture “Tilted Arc,” which aroused such hatred in a public square in New York that it was removed in Serra’s entry for the 1991 Carnegie International art show consisted of two black rectangles, each hanging on a different wall, one placed high and the other near the floor.
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Richard Serra Richard Serra
Hand Catching Lead - Splashing Lead - Interview with Charlie Rose -
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Donald Judd, Untitled, 1968
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Donald Judd, Untitled, 1968
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Donald Judd, Untitled, 1969
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Donald Judd, Untitled
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Donald Judd, Progression
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Donald Judd, Untitled. Marfa, Texas.
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Minimalism in Music
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Beginnings Minimalism began as ‘Systems Music’ in the 1960s.
(Today, in the realm of computer music, "systems music" refers to fractal-based, computer-assisted composition, and in particular iterated function systems music, in which a function "is applied repeatedly, each time taking as argument its value at the previous application" (Gogins 1991). Features of systems music were repetition, simple melody, and slowly changing harmony. Stockhausen’s ‘Stimmung’ (1968) is a prime example. It consists of 51 sections (called "moments") and is considered to be "the first major Western composition to be based entirely on the production of vocal harmonics.“ Listen to a clip:
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Terry Riley In C consists of 53 short, numbered musical phrases, lasting from half a beat to 32 beats; each phrase may be repeated an arbitrary number of times. Each musician has control over which phrase he or she plays: players are encouraged to play the phrases starting at different times, even if they are playing the same phrase.
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Steve Reich Reich, who took part in the first performance of In C, was greatly influenced by Riley’s ideas. He developed a style based on the idea of gradual change – of texture, rhythm and harmony He also explored the concept of Phase Shifting
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Clapping Music In this piece, written in 1972, Reich takes one rhythmic pattern and repeats it 156 times. Clap 1 never changes. Clap 2 moves the pattern one quaver forward after each 12th repeat.
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Reich’s influences John Adams John Tavener Chris Martin Philip Glass
Mike Oldfield Michael Nyman Tomasz Sikorski Arvo Part
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Photography out of Conceptual (Pop & Minimal, and performance) Art Why has photography moved from the margin to the center of contemporary art in the last 40 years? Barbara Kruger Untitled (You are Not Yourself), 1981
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Gilbert and George, The Singing Sculpture, 1970, photograph of performance (Gilbert Proesch, b.1943, Italy; George Passmore, b. 1942, England). “Banal” photographic documentation of ephemeral works, like this “living sculpture.” Gilbert & George with Ginkgo series, British pavilion Venice Biennale 2005, This series was included in the 2008 San Francisco G & G retrospective.
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Annette Messager (French, b
Annette Messager (French, b. 1943) My Vows (Mes Voeux), , gelatin-silver prints under glass and string, dimensions variable detail
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Annette Messager, My Vows, 1990. Gelatin silver prints and string
Annette Messager, My Vows, Gelatin silver prints and string. Dimensions vary with installation, approx.: 140 x 73 inches. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2007 purchase Catholic votives
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