SFMOMA PRESENTS FIRST SOL LEWITT RETROSPECTIVE
IN 20 YEARS Exhibition Features Four Decades of Work by the Pioneer Conceptual
Artist
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) will highlight 40
years of work by Sol LeWitt in the long-awaited exhibition Sol
LeWitt: A Retrospective. The first comprehensive survey of LeWitt's
work since 1978, the retrospective will present over 200 works --
ranging from the well known wall drawings and structures to photographs,
books and works on paper -- from each phase of the artist's career.
Organized by Gary Garrels, SFMOMA Elise S. Haas Chief Curator and
curator of painting and sculpture, in collaboration with LeWitt, the
exhibition will open on February 19 and be on view in the Museum's
fourth-floor galleries through May 21, 2000, and in the fifth-floor
galleries through May 30, 2000.
Sol LeWitt was born in 1928 in Hartford, Connecticut, and received
his BFA in 1949 from Syracuse University. In 1953 he moved to New
York, where he attended what is now known as the School of Visual
Arts, and from 1955 to 1956 worked as a graphic artist for the architect
I.M. Pei. In the mid-1960s, he began taking occasional teaching positions
at art schools including Cooper Union, the School of Visual Arts and
New York University. His work was first publicly exhibited in 1963
at St. Mark's Church, New York.
Since 1965, LeWitt has had hundreds of solo exhibitions. His first
retrospective was presented at the Gemeentemuseum in The Hague in
1970 and later showcased in a major mid-career retrospective at the
Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1978. His work has been featured
in innumerable group exhibitions. LeWitt's pieces have been collected
by some of the most prestigious museums in the world, including SFMOMA,
the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum,
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the
Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art, Paris's
Musée National d'Art Moderne, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum and the
Tate Gallery, London.
Development of a Distinct Philosophy
Beginning in 1962, LeWitt began to make a series of geometric wall
reliefs, soon moving to free-standing objects or "structures," the
name he uses for all of this sculptural work. At this time his work
was closely related to that of other artists, including Carl Andre,
Donald Judd and Robert Morris, who were developing the movement that
was dubbed Minimalism. By 1964 his structures had been simplified
to open, linear forms, in which ideas could be explored in permutations
and series.
In the mid-1960s, he pioneered the Conceptual art movement, emphasizing
ideas for the generation of art rather than working from physical
materials. LeWitt published "Paragraphs on Conceptual Art," an influential
statement on Conceptualism, in a 1967 issue of Artforum and
followed this with "Sentences on Conceptual Art," which appeared in
Art Language in 1969.
In "Paragraphs on Conceptual Art," LeWitt stated the importance of
reduction in the artistic process: "When an artist uses a conceptual
form of art, it means that all of the planning and decisions are made
beforehand and the execution is a perfunctory affair. The idea becomes
the machine that makes the art." His work is focused upon the ideas
behind it and the proscribed rendering of form to realize a physical
manifestation of those ideas.
Supporting his idea that the thought is more important than the act,
LeWitt rejects the notion of art as a unique and precious object.
He often uses assistants to execute the works based upon his detailed
instructions. Adherence to LeWitt's system does not validate a scientific
principle or insure technical perfection. For LeWitt, an idea may
be mathematically or scientifically invalid, but as long as the executor
follows the system established by the artist, a true expression of
the idea is produced. The intent is to merely to make good art. Instructions
for executing a work give way to any number of physical manifestations
of an idea; some will be beautiful, some will not, but the idea maintains
its integrity. His art exists, above all, in the space between the
artist's conception and the viewer's reception; it is dependent upon
the viewer's sensory responses for its completion. Some instructions
are simple and straightforward and some are long and complex.
For example, LeWitt's instructions for the execution of Wall Drawing
#340, 1980, mandates:
Six-part drawing. The wall is divided horizontally and vertically
into six equal parts. 1st part: On red, blue horizontal parallel lines,
and in the center, a circle within which are yellow vertical parallel
lines; 2nd part: On yellow, red horizontal parallel lines, and in
the center, a square within which are blue vertical parallel lines;
3rd part: On blue, yellow horizontal parallel lines, and in the center,
a triangle within which are red vertical parallel lines; 4th part:
On red, yellow horizontal parallel lines, and in the center, a rectangle
within which are blue vertical parallel lines; 5th part: On yellow,
blue horizontal parallel lines, and in the center, a trapezoid within
which are red vertical parallel lines; 6th part: On blue, red horizontal
parallel lines, and in the center, a parallelogram within which are
yellow vertical parallel lines. The horizontal lines do not enter
the figures.
LeWitt's work strikes a delicate balance between perceptual and conceptual
qualities; between dedication to the simplicity and order of geometry
and his pursuit of visual beauty and intuitive creation; and between
his authorship and anonymity regarding his work. Wall drawings, perhaps
more than any other medium LeWitt uses, illustrate this inherent tension
between craftsmanship and anonymity. The historical precedent of Renaissance
fresco painting, which LeWitt deeply admires, is counterbalanced by
the execution of his wall drawings. By using industrial materials
that erase any trace of craft and employing assistants to execute
his ideas, LeWitt was one of the first artists to renounce the importance
of the artist's hand. However, LeWitt's desire to adhere to a system
does not negate his wish to create truly beautiful wall drawings.
As the artist said in the early 1980s, "I would like to produce something
I would not be ashamed to show Giotto."
Four Decades of Work
In 1968 LeWitt made his first artist's book, developing an array of
variations of straight lines, overdrawn in four directions. In a logical
extension, LeWitt made the radical break of executing some of these
drawings in large scale with pencil directly on the wall, the first
of his "wall drawings," which would form the basis for his most sustained,
important and richly developed work over the next thirty years. This
shift also set the pattern throughout his career of moving readily
back and forth between works on paper, wall drawings and structures.
It is this way of working through theme and variation among media
and materials that will be highlighted in the SFMOMA retrospective.
Idea, detail and execution merge in the work Incomplete Open Cubes,
1974, in which LeWitt explores all possible configurations of an incomplete
cube. Each arrangement is expressed in three ways: as a three-dimensional
wooden structure composed of eight-inch segments; as a schematic drawing;
and a photograph of the sculpture. In its most reduced state, the
cube is achieved with three segments. At its most complex, it is fashioned
with eleven edges and comes closest to forming a complete cube. Between
the boundaries, LeWitt illustrates each possibility of a cube-structures
with four segments, five segments and so on. He presents the elements
by rank, with both the sculptures and pictures ordered from the least
to most complex.
In the 1980s, LeWitt's work shifted significantly. Geometric shapes
and their permutations became the dominant subject of his 1980s wall
drawings, which are executed in layers of colored ink washes that
create an extraordinarily varied palette of luminous tones. His works,
until then linear and muted, now included three geometric shapes --
circle, square and cone -- and were created with a richer and warmer
palette. For example in 1982, LeWitt executed a series entitled Forms
Derived from a Cube, in which he depicted variations of geometric
elements found within a cube. The piece signifies the beginning of
a more selective and interpretive approach to his work; with an innumerable
number of possible permutations of a cube, LeWitt chose to depict
only 24 variations. These, in turn, at the end of the decade, inspired
a new series of complex geometric, crystal-like forms, executed both
as multi-colored wall drawings and as structures of white painted
wood that erupt from the floor.
Over the years, LeWitt repeatedly experimented with the idea of a
star in different colors and configurations. His Star series exemplifies
the artist's mature exploration of serialism and geometry. LeWitt's
1996 Wall Drawing #808 -- presented at the Bienal Internacional
São Paolo where LeWitt represented the United States -- presents
an array of three-to nine-pointed stars, each centered within a black-bordered
rectangular section of wall space. The artist's strict use of geometry
dictates that each star is constructed from the form of a regular
polygon, and each point of the star rests on the circumference of
a circle. LeWitt achieves the broad range of color in each section
through a process of layering, rather than mixing, his traditional
four colors. In later works from the 1990s -- such as Wall Drawing
#879: Loopy Doopy (Black and White), 1998, which is composed of
broad, lively swirls -- LeWitt began to incorporate more fluid shapes
and wider brushstrokes. Moving away from the strict systematic forms
of his earlier work, the latest pieces have a rhythmic optical playfulness
and exuberance, an almost decorative quality, often combining bright,
saturated colors with alternately saturated blacks.
Sol LeWitt: A Retrospective will be accompanied by a 368-page
catalogue with essays by Martin Friedman, Gary Garrels, Andrea Miller-Keller,
Brenda Richardson, Anne Rorimer, John Weber and Adam Weinberg. Featuring
a lavish photo section with 140 color and 315 black-and-white photographs,
the catalogue also includes a selection of LeWitt's writings, the
complete exhibition checklist and a bibliography. The catalogue is
co-published by the Yale University Press and will be available in
a $39.95 softcover edition and a $75 cloth edition at the SFMOMA MuseumStore.
In addition, SFMOMA's Education Department will present a host of
public programs, including a studio program for youth, a three-part
lecture series and a half-day symposium. For more information, call
the Office of Public Programs at 415/357-4102.
After its SFMOMA presentation, the exhibition will travel to the Museum
of Contemporary Art in Chicago (July to October 2000), the Whitney
Museum of American Art in New York (October 2000 to February 2001)
and other international venues.
Sol LeWitt: A Retrospective is organized by the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art. Support for this exhibition has been generously
provided by the Henry Luce Foundation and a grant from the National
Endowment for the Arts. Additional support is provided by Henry S.
McNeil Jr.