Sol LeWitt: Wall and Vera Lutter: Inside In. The Kunsthaus Graz shows two solitary positions of artistic examination that address the subject of space. In Space 02, Vera Lutter works with large surface photographs that portray various spaces using the pinhole camera technique. On the upper floor of Space 01 a completely different kind of spatial construction awaits the visitor: from more than 140 tons of lightweight concrete block, Sol LeWitt has created a vivid combination of reactive installation and autonomous sculpture.
Sol LeWitt
Wall
Feb 28, 2004-May 2,2004
Vera Lutter
Inside In
Feb 28, 2004-May 2,2004
Following on from the opening exhibition about perception in art, the
Kunsthaus Graz shows two solitary positions of artistic examination that
address the subject of space. In Space 02, Vera Lutter works with large
surface photographs that portray various spaces using the pinhole camera
technique. On the upper floor of Space 01 a completely different kind of
spatial construction awaits the visitor: from more than 140 tons of
lightweight concrete block, Sol LeWitt has created a vivid combination of
reactive installation and autonomous sculpture.
Sol LeWitt is an icon of contemporary art. In the sixties, with his
spatial structures he contributed to sculpture in a way that changed the
understanding of artistic work, and thus became one of the founders of
both Minimal and Concept Art. The reduction of forms and contents of his
work, as well as the principal critique of its material character and the
process of creation, are in the tradition of constructivism of the 20th
century. With impressive consistency he developed abstract sculpture into
minimalist concepts. Like no other artist of his generation, he thus gave
an important impetus for the idea of the work of art as a concept. In this
way the classical concept of authorship was finally revoked, thereby
opening up a new field of possibilities for artistic interventions and
manifestations. For Sol LeWitt, minimalism and concept do not mean a
reduction of possibilities, but an endless variation of forms and images
in the true sense of the word.
For the Kunsthaus he places himself at the beginning of a discourse with
space and its perception. In abstraction according to Mondrian, aspects of
the construction of images and illusion are addressed whilst, in
minimalism, abstraction is concrete materialism. The object is perceived
1:1 in its physical existence, any significance is denied and tautology
made the principle. In this clearly defined space, the beholder becomes
the active subject, and it is this very space that becomes the metric for
maneuver.
Here is where our interest in Sol LeWitt's work sets in. The large-format
stone sculpture, the artist's designs for Space 01 in the Kunsthaus,
surveys the room and subjects it to a perceptive experiment. The visitor
experiences the massive wall as both built architecture, demarcation
between inside and outside, and as minimalist sculpture and tactile
object.
For Sol LeWitt the word perception has the meaning of "the apprehension of
the sense data, the objective understanding of the idea and simultaneously
a subjective interpretation of both."
In the image 'Untitled', 1996.
Curators
Peter Pakesch, Katrin Bucher
Alvin Lucier: Concert
In the context of the exhibition, there will be a concert in the spatial
sculpture with the internationally renowned composer, musician and sound
artist for New Music, Alvin Lucier. Alvin Lucier will compose a work
especially for Sol LeWitt's sculptural work that surveys the newly created
space by means of sound.
Exhibition catalogue
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with illustrations of the
sculpture in the space and texts by Peter Pakesch (Director of the
Landesmuseum Joanneum, Graz), Martin Prinzhorn (Professor of linguistics,
University of Vienna), Marco De Michelis (Professor of architecture,
University of Venice) and Paul Horwich (Professor of philosophy of
science, Cornell University, New York)
Published by Walther Konig, Koln.
Kunsthaus Graz am Landesmuseum Joanneum
Lendkai 1, A-8020 Graz
T +43 316/8017-9200