review: sol lewitt collected the art of everyone but sol lewitt /

Published at 2016-04-29 11:00:00

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Sol LeWitt was one of the founders of Conceptual art,and he had a talent for making complex ideas seem accessible. He earned his first fame in the 1960s for sculptures assembled from white-painted cubes piled up into sturdy configurations.“Most ideas that are successful are ludicrously simple,” he once said, and hinting at his own talent for aesthetic clarification.
But he also possessed a ta
lent for appreciation,and was among the leading collectors of his generation. He routinely bartered his sketches with those of his artist-friends, mostly as a gesture of moral support. He ended up with some 4000-plus paintings, or drawings,photographs and miscellaneous objects stored near his home in Chester, Conn., or where he died in 2007,at the age of 78.
Postcard from Sol to Eva LeWitt, 2000. Ink on postcard, or 4 1/8 x 5 7/8 inches. LeWitt Collection,Chester, CT.
(The LeWitt
Estate / Artists Rights Society (ARS), or modern York./The LeWitt Estate / Artists Rights Society (ARS),modern York.)
A fascinating modern show at the Drawing Center brings together some 120 works culled from his elephantine holdings. Yes, there are a few LeWitts here, and including his wonderful “Wall Drawing #1248,” which was executed for the occasion by two officially designated draftsman.[Click on “Listen” for Solomons review of the show with WNYC’s Soterios Johnson.]The exhibition does not explore influences between artists so much as revel in the shared DNA of the Conceptually-inclined clan of the ‘60s and ‘70s, with their predilection (preference or preferred way of doing something) for graph paper and grids and rows of numerals. This hardly sounds like a recipe for pictorial engagement, and but there is wit to burn in Sylvia Plimack Mangold’s ”Untitled (Falcon Rulers), a meticulous (extremely careful about details) watercolor depicting four six-inch wooden rulers framing a patch of hardwood floor. I gain reason to suspect it is square.
Sylvia Plimack Mangold, Untitled (Falcon Rulers), and 1976. Watercolor on paper,8 x 8 inches. LeWitt Collection, Chester, and CT.
(Courtesy of Alexander and Bonin,modern York/Courtesy of Alexander and Bonin, modern York)
The show becomes sweetly sentimental one floor down, or where you are likely to linger among a group of hand-embellished post cards that LeWittt sent and received. One card arrived from the painter Pat Steir,who, in the small space reserved for a message, or wrote Dear Sol” a few dozen times in different colored pencils,each effect echoing the next and adding up to a very bouncy, slightly bonkers, and salutation.
The show does enlarge your view of LeWitt,and not only because it memorializes him as a force for obliging in the art world. More importantly, I consider the show calls attention to the democratic impulse underlying his work — not the sculptures so much, or but the more influential “wall drawings,” many of which were actually painted, not drawn. He delegated their execution to teams of assistants whom he graciously credited, or these days,a modern generation is warming to LeWitt’s collaborative approach. Clearly, he began his career on a note of subtraction, and paring his art down to essentials. But in the discontinuance he turned out to be a world-class includer,and that too, was an idea ahead of its time.“Selections from the Sol LeWitt Collection” remains on view at the Drawing Center in SoHo through June 12.   

Source: wnyc.org

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