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Auction archive: Lot number 179

Donald Judd

Estimate
US$200,000 - US$300,000
Price realised:
US$341,000
Auction archive: Lot number 179

Donald Judd

Estimate
US$200,000 - US$300,000
Price realised:
US$341,000
Beschreibung:

Donald Judd Untitled (89-26) 1989 painted aluminum 11 3/4 x 23 5/8 x 11 3/4 in. (30 x 60 x 30 cm) Stamped and numbered "DONALD JUDD 89-26 LASCAUX MATERIALS LTD. BROOKLYN, NY" on the reverse.
Provenance Donald Young Gallery, Chicago Christie's, New York, Contemporary Art Part II, November 19, 1997, lot 412 Private Collection Christie's, London, Post-War & Contemporary Art, June 23, 2006, lot 137 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Chicago, Donald Young Gallery, Donald Judd June 2 - June 24, 1989 Catalogue Essay The bold, ordered, and strikingly simple sculptures of Donald Judd were believed by the artist to be "products of creative imagination just as much as classical sculptures and figurative bronzes" causing him to reject the term minimalist. (A. Hamilton, "Space odyssey: Donald Judd –space, light and sculptures that take on a life of their own", The Independent, August 13, 2013). In the early 1960s, Judd turned towards creating free standing, three-dimensional objects after having abandoned painting. With an interest in repetition and simplicity, which would become hallmarks of his work, Judd separated himself from conventional categories of art. In his text, Specific Objects (published in 1965), Judd discussed how his works existed outside the realms of traditional sculpture and painting, refuting archaic definitions and paving the way for a new manner of discussing and examining objects. Throughout his practice, Judd was increasingly aware of, and focused on, the inherent power and quality of color. Beginning in 1983, Judd created horizontal, aluminum wall sculptures where color reasserted its centrality within his oeuvre and his ideas on art more generally. Untitled (89-26), 1989, hails from Judd’s critically acclaimed Swiss Box series. Begun in 1983, the series witnessed Judd’s new-found exuberance as a colorist. With such works as the present lot, Judd started incorporating the brilliant hues of industrial paints in his sculptures treating color formally as an object. Untitled (89-26) is a classic intimate Judd volumetric wall piece. As the viewer moves across the work, subtle elements of the work begin to emerge. Judd creates a void where space, light and object play and intertwine to create an internal pool of colors. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Judd produced radical works that eschewed the classical European ideals of representational sculpture and has continued to inspire succeeding generations of artists and designers. The present work is an excellent example of Judd’s deep respect for his materials and ideas but also the manner in which those elements are assembled into a discrete object of interminable beauty and attraction. Read More Artist Bio Donald Judd American • 1928 - 1994 Donald Judd was an American artist known for large-scale minimalistic sculptures, which he personally referred to as "specific objects." Though associated with Minimalism, Judd did not wish to be confined to this categorization and felt that his work was more complex. He utilized industrial materials and demonstrated the way in which they interacted with their surroundings, an effect he felt was more powerful than flat oil on canvas. Judd was more interested in the spacing of his pieces and the way viewers would interpret them than the importance of the pieces themselves. Inspired by architecture, the artist designed and produced his own furniture, predominantly in wood, and eventually hired a diverse team of carpenters late in his career. View More Works

Auction archive: Lot number 179
Auction:
Datum:
15 May 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Donald Judd Untitled (89-26) 1989 painted aluminum 11 3/4 x 23 5/8 x 11 3/4 in. (30 x 60 x 30 cm) Stamped and numbered "DONALD JUDD 89-26 LASCAUX MATERIALS LTD. BROOKLYN, NY" on the reverse.
Provenance Donald Young Gallery, Chicago Christie's, New York, Contemporary Art Part II, November 19, 1997, lot 412 Private Collection Christie's, London, Post-War & Contemporary Art, June 23, 2006, lot 137 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Chicago, Donald Young Gallery, Donald Judd June 2 - June 24, 1989 Catalogue Essay The bold, ordered, and strikingly simple sculptures of Donald Judd were believed by the artist to be "products of creative imagination just as much as classical sculptures and figurative bronzes" causing him to reject the term minimalist. (A. Hamilton, "Space odyssey: Donald Judd –space, light and sculptures that take on a life of their own", The Independent, August 13, 2013). In the early 1960s, Judd turned towards creating free standing, three-dimensional objects after having abandoned painting. With an interest in repetition and simplicity, which would become hallmarks of his work, Judd separated himself from conventional categories of art. In his text, Specific Objects (published in 1965), Judd discussed how his works existed outside the realms of traditional sculpture and painting, refuting archaic definitions and paving the way for a new manner of discussing and examining objects. Throughout his practice, Judd was increasingly aware of, and focused on, the inherent power and quality of color. Beginning in 1983, Judd created horizontal, aluminum wall sculptures where color reasserted its centrality within his oeuvre and his ideas on art more generally. Untitled (89-26), 1989, hails from Judd’s critically acclaimed Swiss Box series. Begun in 1983, the series witnessed Judd’s new-found exuberance as a colorist. With such works as the present lot, Judd started incorporating the brilliant hues of industrial paints in his sculptures treating color formally as an object. Untitled (89-26) is a classic intimate Judd volumetric wall piece. As the viewer moves across the work, subtle elements of the work begin to emerge. Judd creates a void where space, light and object play and intertwine to create an internal pool of colors. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Judd produced radical works that eschewed the classical European ideals of representational sculpture and has continued to inspire succeeding generations of artists and designers. The present work is an excellent example of Judd’s deep respect for his materials and ideas but also the manner in which those elements are assembled into a discrete object of interminable beauty and attraction. Read More Artist Bio Donald Judd American • 1928 - 1994 Donald Judd was an American artist known for large-scale minimalistic sculptures, which he personally referred to as "specific objects." Though associated with Minimalism, Judd did not wish to be confined to this categorization and felt that his work was more complex. He utilized industrial materials and demonstrated the way in which they interacted with their surroundings, an effect he felt was more powerful than flat oil on canvas. Judd was more interested in the spacing of his pieces and the way viewers would interpret them than the importance of the pieces themselves. Inspired by architecture, the artist designed and produced his own furniture, predominantly in wood, and eventually hired a diverse team of carpenters late in his career. View More Works

Auction archive: Lot number 179
Auction:
Datum:
15 May 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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