| Home > Current Exhibitions > Statements: Beuys, Flavin, Judd |
Statements: Beuys, Flavin, Judd
![]() |
Date: May 15, 2008 - July 12, 2009 Place: Friedman Gallery |
|
|
Image: Joseph Beuys, Schlitten (Sled) , 1969 wooden sled, felt, fabric straps, flashlight, fat, oil paint, string 13-3/4 x 35-7/16 x 13-3/4 in. Alfred and Marie Greisinger Collection, Walker Art Center, T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 1992 © 1969 Estate of Joseph Beuys / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York |
Beuys was an artist, teacher, and political activist who became one of the art world’s most discussed, celebrated, and controversial postwar figures. He wanted people to see his objects as “stimulants for the transformation of the idea of sculpture.” He pursued this goal by using organic materials and focusing on the process of creation, allowing chemical reactions, fermentations, and decay to render his objects constantly in a “state of change” and evolution. His preoccupation with the collective memory and trauma of European culture and civilization led him to label his objects as “vehicles” for transformation, healing, and action.
Judd paved for himself a path between painting and sculpture, with singleness or wholeness as a key pursuit. In direct contrast to Beuys’ expanded notion of art, Judd championed a new sculptural aesthetic of bare geometrical shapes he termed “specific objects.” By 1965, he began commissioning industrial fabricators to weld and manufacture his works in a wide variety of “new” materials—stainless steel, galvanized iron, anodized aluminum, brass, plexiglass, Formica, and plywood—he observed as “either recent inventions or things not used before in art.”
Like Judd, his close friend, Flavin also rejected the Minimalist label many critics and curators placed on his work. He worked with generic fluorescent lighting to make horizontal and vertical sculptures along walls and floors—including corners, baseboards, and stairwells—dedicating his career to combining “traditions of painting and sculpture in architecture with acts of electric light defining space.” His challenge of artistic convention extended to the labels “sculpture” and “environment,” which he abandoned in favor of creating “proposals” and “situations” in barren rooms. This last practice is a direct predecessor to the work of contemporary artists such as Tino Sehgal, whose “constructed situations” recently received their first Walker exhibition.
Raymond cites several threads connecting the artists in Statements, including their consideration of the space surrounding their work and the removal of their own hands from the production process; they took on the function of architects providing specifications for others to fabricate the piece or, in the case of Beuys, by transforming the creative process into a collaboration. They operated in “a different manner but toward similar goals,” she says. “There is also a shared confidence, an earnest conviction in both forms and ideas guiding their work. They weren’t interested in flamboyance and monumentality. Each of them experimented with new alternatives and presented concrete statements despite the unwelcome reception by mainstream culture at the time.
Related Events
![]() |
Family Programs A Laboratory of Ideas Free First Saturday Saturday, November 1, 2008 10:00 am to 3:00 pm |
Related Links
|
eavesdrop 05.19.08 http://blogs.walkerart.org/visualarts/2008/05/19/eavesdrop-051908/ Walker blogs, Visual Arts: Exhibitions | |
|
I wanted a Titian and all I got was a lump of lard http://blogs.walkerart.org/offcenter/2008/09/09/wanted-titian-lump-lard/ Walker blogs, Off Center: Art History | |
|
Political statements: Free Beuys and Judd buttons http://blogs.walkerart.org/offcenter/2008/10/14/free-beuys-judd-buttons/ Walker blogs, Off Center: Current Events | |
|
Would Beuys have auditioned for American Idol? http://blogs.walkerart.org/offcenter/2008/12/03/would-beuys-have-auditioned-for-american-idol/ Walker blogs, Off Center: Art History | |
|
Watch the inauguration, or visit the Walker? Have it both ways. http://blogs.walkerart.org/offcenter/2009/01/16/watch-the-inauguration-or-visit-the-walker-have-it-both-ways/ Walker blogs, Off Center: Behind the scenes | |

