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Auction archive: Lot number 24

Donald Judd

Estimate
US$1,000,000 - US$1,500,000
Price realised:
US$1,082,500
Auction archive: Lot number 24

Donald Judd

Estimate
US$1,000,000 - US$1,500,000
Price realised:
US$1,082,500
Beschreibung:

Donald Judd Untitled 90-9 Donaldson 1990 Cor-ten steel and brown Plexiglas, in four parts each: 9 7/8 x 19 3/4 x 9 7/8 in. (25 x 50 x 25 cm)
Provenance Annemarie Verna, Zurich Private Collection Exhibited London, Sprüth Magers Lee, Donald Judd February 18, 2003 – April 14, 2004 Literature F. Meyer, V. Rattemeyer, Donald Judd Räume Spaces, Ostfildern Cantz, 1993, p. 70 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Donald Judd as theorist and—most importantly as a ground breaking artist—defined the transition between the late Modernism of the New York School and the radicallity of all that has come after. As one of the earliest and most lasting practitioners of minimalism, Judd produced objects that could stand and be judged alone, wrested from the grasp of history. Utilizing the rigid presentation of standardized structures – generally known as – stacks, boxes and progressions, he rejected the illusionism of artistic tradition and instead embraced the steadiness of the geometric form. Judd’s works are emblematic of what we associate as historical Minimalism, his works exploring the central tenets of serialization, elementariness, visual antagonism, and simplicity of production. In Judd’s work, materials vary and remain materials in and of themselves, often industrial in nature or never before used in art. He argued that, “There is an objectivity to the obdurate identity of a material.” New materials, as he called them, were not as accessible as oil on canvas and are hard to relate to one another. In the early 1960s, Judd abandoned painting for “sculpture”, solidifying the transition with his manifesto, Specific Objects. In reaction to Abstract Expressionism and through the critical rejection of figurative allusion, Judd created his first “specific object,” a non-referential thing free, as he saw it, from a culture conditioned by the preconceived and the simulated. In a world marked by the visual spectacle of media excess and warfare, where the act of seeing was conditioned by the rhetoric and marvel of consumer culture, Judd struggled to find a way to create objects that could be seen to exist beyond or above existing definitions and experiences. His seemingly expressionless, machine-like objects greatly depended on the viewer’s participation with them thereby offering the possibility of unbounded experience and interpretation. In Untitled 90-9 Donaldson, 1990, Judd creates a familiar progression in corten steel and brown Plexiglas. Here, the work assumes the uncanny horizontality of a painting, with the repetition of four separate boxes displayed at length across the span of one wall. Arranged in succession, the viewer is compelled to walk from side to side, while the eye scans the top, sides and insides of the boxes, in part, to observe the undeniable effect of the Plexiglas that connotes the kind of spatial quality intimated by painting. Juxtaposed against the opacity of the weathered steel, the color of the light reflecting Plexi allows the eye to travel father in where perhaps there is no where else to go. Unlike painting where space is conceived of by layering different colors on the same surface, Untitled 90-9 Donaldson, 1990, does so through the tangibility of real space as light reflects from one side of the box to the other, paradoxically rendering, a depth greater than that of the box itself. Judd has described his three-dimensional work as, “A single thing, which is open and extended, more or less environmental.” Like other three-dimensional art, such as Duchamp’s readymades, Judd’s works are meant to be seen at once, and not as he has suggested, “part by part.” His use of the reflected colored surface brings to mind, the infinitely spatial quality of Reinhardt’s flat paintings. In his discussion of painting, Judd wrote, “In Reinhardt’s paintings, just back from the plane of the canvas, there is a flat plane and this seems in turn indefinitely deep.” The artist himself has stated that although his objects resemble sculpture, they are in fact, nearer to painting. The tension in his work perhaps lies in his rigorous aesthetic doctrine that offers very little, but exper

Auction archive: Lot number 24
Auction:
Datum:
15 Nov 2012
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Donald Judd Untitled 90-9 Donaldson 1990 Cor-ten steel and brown Plexiglas, in four parts each: 9 7/8 x 19 3/4 x 9 7/8 in. (25 x 50 x 25 cm)
Provenance Annemarie Verna, Zurich Private Collection Exhibited London, Sprüth Magers Lee, Donald Judd February 18, 2003 – April 14, 2004 Literature F. Meyer, V. Rattemeyer, Donald Judd Räume Spaces, Ostfildern Cantz, 1993, p. 70 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Donald Judd as theorist and—most importantly as a ground breaking artist—defined the transition between the late Modernism of the New York School and the radicallity of all that has come after. As one of the earliest and most lasting practitioners of minimalism, Judd produced objects that could stand and be judged alone, wrested from the grasp of history. Utilizing the rigid presentation of standardized structures – generally known as – stacks, boxes and progressions, he rejected the illusionism of artistic tradition and instead embraced the steadiness of the geometric form. Judd’s works are emblematic of what we associate as historical Minimalism, his works exploring the central tenets of serialization, elementariness, visual antagonism, and simplicity of production. In Judd’s work, materials vary and remain materials in and of themselves, often industrial in nature or never before used in art. He argued that, “There is an objectivity to the obdurate identity of a material.” New materials, as he called them, were not as accessible as oil on canvas and are hard to relate to one another. In the early 1960s, Judd abandoned painting for “sculpture”, solidifying the transition with his manifesto, Specific Objects. In reaction to Abstract Expressionism and through the critical rejection of figurative allusion, Judd created his first “specific object,” a non-referential thing free, as he saw it, from a culture conditioned by the preconceived and the simulated. In a world marked by the visual spectacle of media excess and warfare, where the act of seeing was conditioned by the rhetoric and marvel of consumer culture, Judd struggled to find a way to create objects that could be seen to exist beyond or above existing definitions and experiences. His seemingly expressionless, machine-like objects greatly depended on the viewer’s participation with them thereby offering the possibility of unbounded experience and interpretation. In Untitled 90-9 Donaldson, 1990, Judd creates a familiar progression in corten steel and brown Plexiglas. Here, the work assumes the uncanny horizontality of a painting, with the repetition of four separate boxes displayed at length across the span of one wall. Arranged in succession, the viewer is compelled to walk from side to side, while the eye scans the top, sides and insides of the boxes, in part, to observe the undeniable effect of the Plexiglas that connotes the kind of spatial quality intimated by painting. Juxtaposed against the opacity of the weathered steel, the color of the light reflecting Plexi allows the eye to travel father in where perhaps there is no where else to go. Unlike painting where space is conceived of by layering different colors on the same surface, Untitled 90-9 Donaldson, 1990, does so through the tangibility of real space as light reflects from one side of the box to the other, paradoxically rendering, a depth greater than that of the box itself. Judd has described his three-dimensional work as, “A single thing, which is open and extended, more or less environmental.” Like other three-dimensional art, such as Duchamp’s readymades, Judd’s works are meant to be seen at once, and not as he has suggested, “part by part.” His use of the reflected colored surface brings to mind, the infinitely spatial quality of Reinhardt’s flat paintings. In his discussion of painting, Judd wrote, “In Reinhardt’s paintings, just back from the plane of the canvas, there is a flat plane and this seems in turn indefinitely deep.” The artist himself has stated that although his objects resemble sculpture, they are in fact, nearer to painting. The tension in his work perhaps lies in his rigorous aesthetic doctrine that offers very little, but exper

Auction archive: Lot number 24
Auction:
Datum:
15 Nov 2012
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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