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Preview: Donald Judd at David Zwirner

hjub_JUDDO0024Untitled1964
21st June – 3rd August, 2013 Private View: Thursday 20th June 24 Grafton Street, London, W1S 4EZ www.davidzwirner.com

David Zwirner is to present an exhibition of works by Donald Judd (1928-1994). This is the first gallery presentation of this seminal artist in London in nearly fifteen years and the first significant exhibition of Judd’s work in the U.K. since his 2004 retrospective at Tate Modern, London. From the early 1960s up until the time of his death, Judd developed a rigorous visual vocabulary that sought clear and definite objects as its primary mode of articulation. Together, the works in this exhibition present an overview of many of Judd’s signature forms and offer insight into his singular commitment to material, colour, and proportion.

One of the most significant American artists of the postwar period, Judd’s oeuvre has come to define what has been referred to as Minimalist art—a label to which the artist strongly objected on the grounds of its generality. In 1965, Judd published his now-canonical treatise “Specific Objects,” in which he eschewed the classical ideals of representational painting and sculpture in favour of work that was objective and straightforward and that avoided grand philosophical statements.

To accomplish this, Judd created declaratively simple, fundamental sculptural forms, which he elaborated and refined over several decades. Many of these took the shape of simple “boxes” or “stacks,” which he would often arrange according to repeated or sequential progressions and standardised proportions. Throughout his body of work, Judd used industrial materials such as plywood, steel, concrete, Plexiglas, and aluminium, employing commercial fabricators in order to attain the surfaces and angles that he desired.

The works presented here, which span the course of Judd’s career, explore the primary preoccupations of the artist’s practice, such as the relationships between surface and volume, interior and exterior space, as well as material and form. Highlights from the exhibition include untitled, 1964, a large-scale rounded square form that sits on the floor and is executed in galvanised iron and coated in the artist’s favored cadmium red; untitled, 1965, an early box format executed in transparent red Plexiglas and stainless steel; examples of Judd’s multi-coloured “Swiss boxes” and “progressions” executed in painted and anodized aluminium; untitled, 1989, a horizontal sequence of four wall-mounted boxes executed in unadorned Douglas fir plywood; and a significant stack executed in coloured Plexiglas and metal.

www.davidzwirner.com

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