We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalising content and advertising. To learn more, check out our Privacy Policy

Podcast

by Ira Ferris
posted 23/03/2014

Talking Sol LeWitt

On last Thursday’s episode of Something Else, Julia and Ira spoke to Macushla Robinson,assistant curator of contemporary international art at the Art Gallery of NSW. The topic was Sol LeWitt, conceptual art pioneer whose 40 years of practice is currently showing at the Art Gallery of NSW.

Podcast is now available here

LeWitt
In late 60s Sol LeWitt wrote famous Paragraphs and Sentences on Conceptual Art and forged a new way of thinking about art practice, where idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work and the execution is only a perfunctory affair.

LeWitt and his colleagues of the time (Frank Stella, Donald Judd, Richard Serra and so on) were developing art practice in response and opposition to the highly personal Abstract Expression, a dominant movement at the time heralded by artists like Jackson Pollock. Expressionist art was all about big emotions, while LeWitt sought to move toward a reductivist vocabulary in art, towards non-metaphoric concreteness. His work is characterised by simple, symmetrical forms and modular repetitions that aim to be as objective as possible, with no narrative ends or excessive emotions. LeWitt art is not “meant for the sensation of the eye.”

Art Gallery of NSW is currently showing LeWitt’s 40 years of practice, exhibition titled ‘Your mind is exactly at that line’. Exhibited are both LeWitt’s minimalist structures and his famous wall drawings, all of which have been installed and painted by appointed ‘artworkers’ (terminology used by LeWitt) following LeWitt’s clear instructions. Lack of the artist’s “sacred” touch is yet another characteristic of LeWitt’s work militated against the expression of emotions. “To work with a plan that is preset is one way of avoiding subjectivity,” wrote LeWitt in his Paragraphs. Opposed to the Abstract Expressionist (and surrealist) rule of chance and momentarily inspiration, LeWitt cautions: “If the artist changes his mind midway through the execution of the piece he compromises the result. […] His wilfulness may only be ego.” Perhaps having others execute his worked helped him avoid the trap of ego’s wilfulness.

Stay connected to Something Else via:
FACEBOOK     TWITTER     BLOG