Minimal Art
Minimal art was an artistic style, which emerged in America the late
1950s. The term was taken from an essay about modern American art by art
philosopher Richard Wollheim in 1965. Hard Edge and Colour Field Painting
tendencies were an important pre-requisite for the development of this style,
as they had essentially prepared the ground for the use of very simple, reduced
minimal forms. Minimal Art first established itself in painting, and then
sculpture, where it had the greatest impact.
Minimal art sculptures were primarily made from industrial materials,
such as aluminium, steel, glass, concrete, wood, plastic or stone. The objects,
frequently reduced to very simple geometric shapes, were industrially produced,
thus removing the artist’s personal signature from the work. The works were
also characterised by serial arrangements of a number of bodies/shapes, and
large dimensions.
The main representatives of Minimal art were Carl Andre, Dan Flavin,
Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, John McCracken and Robert Morris.
In contrast with Abstract Expressionism and its impulsive and gestural
expression of the unconsciousness, Minimal artists focused on material
aesthetics, the relationship of objects to space, the effects of light, and
producing highly reduced arrangements. Donald Judd (1928-94) followed these
basic principles, arranging coloured aluminium boxes in different ways, above,
or next to one another. Carl Andre (born 1935) stacked rectangular wooden pegs
on top of each other, or in a row. Dan Flavin (1933-96) created subtle light
spaces with evenly laid out neon tubes. Minimalism also had an impact on dance
and music in the 1960s. Minimalist principles also influenced artistic
phenomenon such as Land Art, Arte Povera and Conceptual Art.
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