Minimalist Sculpture
Minimalism stripped sculpture to plain geometric units of industrial material, refusing composition, illusion, and personal touch. The work became a literal object whose meaning arose from its presence in the room and the viewer's encounter with it.
Definition
A 1960s tendency in which sculpture is reduced to simple, often repeated geometric units of industrial material, presenting itself as a literal object in the viewer's space rather than a composed image.
Scope
Covers Minimalist sculpture of the 1960s: the 'specific object,' the use of repeated industrial units, the rejection of internal composition and metaphor, and the relocation of meaning to the viewer's bodily encounter in real space. Treats Minimalism as the endpoint of modern abstraction; its extension into site and installation is handled in the next area.
Core questions
- What did Donald Judd mean by the 'specific object'?
- Why did Minimalists reject internal composition, illusion, and the artist's touch?
- How does Minimalist work shift meaning onto the viewer's bodily presence?
- What was at stake in Fried's charge of 'theatricality'?
Key concepts
- the specific object
- literalism
- seriality and repetition
- industrial fabrication
- the viewer in space
- objecthood
Key theories
- The specific object
- Judd argued for work that was neither painting nor traditional sculpture but a single, whole 'specific object' of real materials in real space, free of illusion and relational composition.
- Objecthood and theatricality
- Fried criticized Minimalism for producing literal objects whose effect depends on the beholder and the situation of viewing, a 'theatrical' condition he opposed to self-contained modernist art.
History
Minimalism emerged in New York in the early 1960s with artists such as Judd, Morris, Andre, and Flavin, who fabricated plain geometric units in industrial materials. Judd's 1965 essay Specific Objects framed the new work, Battcock's 1968 anthology gathered the debate, and Fried's 1967 Art and Objecthood mounted the most influential critique, defining the terms of argument for years.
Debates
- Literal object versus theatrical situation
- Whether Minimalism's reduction to the literal object purified art of illusion and composition, or whether, as Fried charged, it made the work dependent on the beholder's presence and slid into mere theatre.
Key figures
- Donald Judd
- Michael Fried
- Gregory Battcock
Related topics
Seminal works
- judd1965
- fried1967
- battcock1968
Frequently asked questions
- What is a 'specific object'?
- In Donald Judd's 1965 essay, a 'specific object' is a work that is neither painting nor conventional sculpture but a single, unified three-dimensional object made of real materials in real space, avoiding illusion and the internal arrangement of parts.
- Why did Minimalists use industrial materials and repetition?
- By using fabricated industrial units and simple repetition, Minimalists removed evidence of the artist's hand and any sense of composed, illusionistic form, so that attention falls on the bare physical presence of the object and the viewer's encounter with it.