- LeWitt, Sol
-
▪ 2008Solomon LeWittAmerican sculptor, printmaker, and draftsmanborn Sept. 9, 1928 , Hartford, Conn.died April 8, 2007 , New York, N.Y.was credited with helping to usher in conceptual art and minimalism as major movements of the post-World War II era with wall drawings that featured basic geometric forms (the triangle, sphere, or quadrilateral) and four basic colours (red, yellow, blue, and black); he allowed his assistants to execute his works from written instructions that resulted in one-of-a-kind creations that might be erased when the walls on which they were painted were primed for another exhibition. LeWitt's sculptures—or structures, as he preferred to refer to them—were often made of baked white enamel cubes and included such classics as Forty-seven Three-Part Variations on Three Different Kinds of Cubes (1967; reconstructed in 1974, with 56 variations), Large Modular Cube (1969), and Cubes with Hidden Cubes (1977). After LeWitt moved from New York to Italy during the 1980s, his style took a radical shift. He began using colour prodigiously; he added ink washes, which allowed him to create new colours; and he introduced curves and free forms. His later works were shown at a 2000 retrospective that was organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and traveled to several major cities, including New York City and Chicago.
* * *
▪ American artistborn Sept. 9, 1928, Hartford, Conn., U.S.died April 8, 2007, New York, N.Y.LeWitt was the son of Russian immigrants. He attended Syracuse University (B.F.A., 1949) and, following military service in Japan and Korea, moved in 1953 to New York City. There he worked as a graphic designer for the architect I.M. Pei (Pei, I.M.) in 1955 and 1956. Following a brief period of trying out the Abstract Expressionist style in the 1950s, LeWitt in the early 1960s began to pursue an essentialist approach to art that was less emotional yet still rich in speculation and interest. He started to work serially, concentrating on sculptures of various gridlike axial arrangements of modular white aluminum, wood, or metal cubes.His work in this vein led him to conclude that the planning of a work of art would always be more significant than its execution as an object. In a statement that became a credo of conceptual art, LeWitt wrote in Artforum magazine in 1967:In conceptual art the idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work…all of the planning and decisions are made beforehand and the execution is a perfunctory affair. The idea becomes a machine that makes the art.Begun in 1968 and running to more than 1,000 examples, his extensive series of numbered wall drawings applied these principles. LeWitt provided written instructions and sometimes a small sketch for each of these abstract works, and the drawing (usually a monumental work painted directly on a gallery wall, as in Wall Drawing # 652 [1990]) was executed by his assistants and others. LeWitt's sculptures, prints, and drawings examined endlessly thoughtful and surprising possibilities of visual extrapolation within a concentration on pattern, geometry, and repetition.* * *
Universalium. 2010.