Carl Andre

Carl Andre

Artwork Details

TITLE

2 (2H x 6S) Aluminum Double Twelver

dATE

1999

Medium

Aluminum bricks

DIMENSION

4 x 8 x 48 in. (10.16 × 20.32 × 121.92 cm)

Carl Andre, one of the most influential and ascetic pioneers of Minimalist sculpture, helped shift the focus of art in the 1960s away from the heroic gestures of Abstract Expressionism toward rudimentary forms and industrial materials. He was a practitioner of the movement at perhaps its most austere, working primarily from a limited range of elemental metals along with granite, wood or, in this case, aluminum bricks. Typically employed in the standard forms in which any contractor could order them from a foundry or quarry, the materials were arranged directly on the ground, with a plainness and Pythagorean purity that brought to mind cairns or sacred tessellation. “I’m not a zealot,” Andre once said. “I’m only a zealot subjectively, for myself. I have found a set of solutions to a set of problems in sculpture, and I work within those parameters. But it is limits that give us possibilities. Without limits nothing really good can be accomplished. I feel I’ve been liberated by them.” He was best known for his floor pieces, such as 64 ACE Zinc, another work in the Collection, which consist of tile-like squares of zinc, copper, steel, aluminum and other metals arranged into larger squares or triangles, meant to be walked on so they could be experienced bodily as well as visually. Abjuring any claim to Conceptualism, Mr. Andre once said of the floor pieces: “There are no ideas hiding under those plates. They’re just plates.”

 


The Brooklyn Rail | Feburary 2012 | In Conversation

Carl Andre with Michèle Gerber Klein and Phong Bui