Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
4 Layers: Placed, Dropped, Thrown, 1968-71/2019
shattered glass, felt, ball bearings, and aluminum bars
dimensions variable
(BL7457)
Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
Extensions, 1970-71
mounted gelatin silver prints
24 x 20 in (61 x 50.8 cm)
(BL0737)
Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
Equals: particles and small sheets (equal same number long sheets), 1967
signed and dated lower right recto
ink on paper
20 1/2 x 25 1/2 in (52.1 x 64.8 cm)
(BL0746)
Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
Repeated Events Within the Same Context (3 Phases) #1, 1967-68
ink and graphite on graph paper
16 x 20 1/2 in (40.6 x 52.1 cm)
(BL0647)
Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
Study for Installation, "On Edge, On Center Shatter" (1968-71), Porto, Portugal, 1999, 1999
signed and dated "B. Le Va 1999" lower left recto
ink on paper
8 1/4 x 11 1/2 in (21 x 29.2 cm)
(BL0859)
Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
Study for Velocity: Impact Run, 1969
ink on paper
11 x 16 3/4 in (27.9 x 42.5 cm)
framed: 13 1/4 x 19 1/4 in (33.7 x 48.9 cm)
(BL9506)
Barry Le Va
(1941-2021)
Untitled (Patterns of Walk While Sticking Cleavers), c. 1970
signed bottom left
ink on paper
18 x 23 in (45.7 x 58.4 cm)
(BL9176)
Bruce Nauman
(b. 1941)
Sound for Mapping the Studio Model (The Video) (still)
DVD (color, sound) 1 hour, 1 minute, 20 seconds
edition 6/6
(BN9491)
© 2024 Bruce Nauman / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, and courtesy of Sperone Westwater
Bruce Nauman
(b. 1941)
Untitled (Studies for Performance Parallelogram (Rolling) (Performance Piece with Mirrors)), 1970
graphite and ink on paper
2 parts; 14 1/2 x 18 1/8 in (36.8 x 46 cm) frame
3 parts; 25 1/2 x 31 1/2 in (64.8 x 80 cm) each frame
(BN9484)
© 2024 Bruce Nauman / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, and courtesy of Sperone Westwater
Bruce Nauman
(b. 1941)
Untitled (Study for Corridor Installation with Mirror - San Jose Installation (Double Wedge Corridor with Mirror) "mirror 5'5" high"), 1971
graphite on paper
23 x 29 in (58.4 x 73.7 cm)
framed: 25 5/8 x 31 5/8 in (65 x 80 cm)
(BN9501)
© 2024 Bruce Nauman / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, and courtesy of Sperone Westwater
Bruce Nauman
(b. 1941)
Untitled (Study for Installation with Yellow Lights (Castelli Installation with Yellow Lights)), 1971
graphite and colored pencil on paper
18 x 24 in (45.7 x 61 cm)
framed: 20 5/8 x 26 5/8 in (52.4 x 67.6 cm) frame
(BN9500)
© 2024 Bruce Nauman / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, and courtesy of Sperone Westwater
Dorothea Rockburne
(b. 1932)
Inverse # 4, 1974
signed and dated in pencil lower right recto
pen on paper
29 1/8 x 39 3/8 in (74 x 100 cm)
(ROC7690)
Dorothea Rockburne
(b. 1932)
Inverse # 6, 1974
signed and dated in pencil lower right recto
pen on folded paper
32 1/8 x 42 1/8 in (81.3 x 106.7 cm)
(ROC8238)
Dorothea Rockburne
(b. 1932)
Locus, 1972
Portfolio with complete set of 6 double-sided aquatint etchings with folding and embossing on Strathmore paper. Printed by Crown Point Press, San Francisco. Published by Parasol Press, Ltd., Portland.
With the original wooden box.
each sheet, unfolded: 40 x 30 in (101.2 x 77.0 cm) full margins, loose and folded as issued
Edition of 42
(PP7849)
Dorothea Rockburne
(b. 1932)
Locus Series #3, 1972
signed, titled, dated and numbered in pencil
relief etching, aquatint, pencil and white oil paint on folded Strathmore Rag Bristol paper
40 x 30 in (101.6 x 76.2 cm)
framed: 45.5 x 35.5 x 2.5 in (115.57 x 90.17 x 6.35 cm)
Edition of 42, published by Parasol Press Ltd
(PP9462)
Richard Serra
1938-2024
C.C. XI, 1983-84
oilstick on paper
42 1/2 x 54 in (108 x 137.2 cm)
(SER9490)
Richard Serra
(1938-2024)
Hand Catching Lead (still), 1968
16mm black-and-white film, silent; 3:30 min.
(SER9505)
David Nolan Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition Radical Artists of the 1960s/1970s: Between Geometry and Gesture, featuring works by Barry Le Va, Bruce Nauman, Richard Serra, Dorothea Rockburne, and stanley brouwn. The exhibition will be on view September 5 through October 26, 2024 at the gallery’s Upper East Side location, half a block from the Met.
When one considers the political unrest, economic uncertainty, racial tension, and even the anti-war demonstrations at New York’s major art institutions, the uneasy atmosphere of the late 1960s in the United States doesn’t feel that far from our current moment. An energetic consumerism was fueling the Pop Art movement, while other artists were challenging both the postwar supremacy of Abstract Expressionism and the strict formalism of Minimalism. Following Marcel Duchamp’s philosophy of complete artistic freedom, movements like Performance Art and Fluxus were pushing art into new material and conceptual experimentation, while the concurrent Arte Povera movement in Italy was espousing the use of inexpensive materials, such as dirt and rags. It was from this heady confusion of cultural rebellion and social upheaval that a handful of artists were radically reshaping the boundaries of artmaking and shattering all preconceived notions of what art could be.
As one of the leading figures of what would come to be known as Process Art, Barry Le Va upended the conceit that sculpture had to be fixed, contained or even beautiful. More interested in the actions of artmaking than the end result, Le Va claimed the entire gallery space as his arena with the enactment of his first Distribution Pieces in 1966, dispersing commonplace materials like felt, glass and ball bearings across the floor in a series of improvised gestures within the gallery’s fixed geometry. (The current exhibition includes drawings related to the installation’s various permutations that reveal the chaos to have been, in fact, meticulously planned.) In doing so, La Va not only expanded the concept of sculpture, but also opened it up to a new physicality, bringing the viewer into relationship with the artwork, and the work in relation to the architecture that surrounded it.
Rather than looking at a single object, audiences were invited to walk around and immerse themselves in the work. Le Va, a fan of Sherlock Holmes, wanted to arouse in viewers a curiosity about the past actions that had created the present arrangement of materials. Titles often offered clues, such as a stack of shattered glass he called 4 Layers: Placed, Dropped, Thrown (1968-71). Perhaps unsurprising given the turmoil of the time, many of Le Va’s early works allude to an unseen violence, such as his signature meat cleaver pieces or Impact Run Velocity Piece (1969), an audio work in which he repeatedly ran across a gallery, hurling his body at its opposing walls for an entire hour. When the recording was later played in the empty gallery, audiences had only audio clues (and the surrounding architecture) to piece together what had transpired.
Elsewhere in Lower Manhattan, Richard Serra was compiling his own list of action verbs (“to splash, to spread, to bind, to weave”) and enacting them in relation to industrial materials like fiberglass, neon and rubber, more concerned with exploring their physical properties than in generating any specific result. Short films, such as Hand Catching Lead (1968), reflect a contained intensity of energy and focus, as well as a liberating disregard for conventional conceptions of sculpture and film. In a further affront to the art establishment, Serra flung molten lead at the juncture of a wall and a floor for his Splash Piece series (1968-70); when the lead cooled, he was left with a cast of his action: bodily gesture writ permanent and solid. Like Le Va, Serra drew incessantly throughout his career in a practice that both informed and was independent from his sculptures, and in the 1970s began using black paintstick on wall mounted linen to explore relationships between viewer and form through large repetitive gestures.
Similarly, Dorothea Rockburne viewed drawing as a material way of thinking, a process in its own right rather than a means to an end. Extensively influenced by both mathematics and dance (she studied with mathematician Max Dehn at Black Mountain College and later joined the Judson Dance Theater in New York), Rockburne’s works of the early 1970s suggest both an intellectual rigor and an emotional depth. In her series Drawing Which Makes Itself, Rockburne combined the gestures of dance with the elegant geometries of nature: folding, scoring and unfolding a white sheet of paper and, in the process, dismantling all definitions of what constituted a drawing. Once again, the viewer is left with faint clues to the artwork’s making, ghostly remnants of prior actions, and a drawing that is as much a sculpture as it is a flat piece of paper.
While his peers were carrying out investigations with everyday commercial and industrial materials, Bruce Nauman was documenting his explorations of what art could be on film, recording himself performing activities as simple as walking around his studio, using his entire body as a gesture and helping to inaugurate video art as a new medium. The idea of studio-as-canvas was one to which Nauman would return throughout his career, such as his 2001 work Sound for Mapping the Studio Model (The Video), an asynchronous presentation of ambient audio with surveillance like video footage of one evening in his studio. Though Nauman’s early works were recorded with 16-millimeter film, he quickly moved on to utilize the first consumer video cameras, again reflecting the Post-Minimalists’ embrace of cheap, readily available materials.
In radically expanding the use of materials, overturning disciplinary hierarchies, and challenging the very idea of what art could be, this group of pioneering artists had an outsized significance within a broader movement that irrevocably altered contemporary art, influencing countless artists as diverse as Jason Rhoades, Mike Kelley, Rachel Whiteread, Monica Bonvicini and Mel Kendrick. From a turbulent and often violent moment in American history, they succeeded in creating change that was profound, enduring and—despite their best intentions—beautiful.
The show currently on view explores the relation between the space and the body through the work of artists like Barry Le Va, Bruce Nauman, Richard Serra, Dorothea Rockburne and stanley brouwn.
Visiting the current show at David Nolan Gallery provides unique access to a series of artists’ conversations and exchanges that informed in the late 60s and 70s a series of pioneering practices in body and space, ultimately resulting in what art historians describe as “Process Art.” In the Upper East Side salon-like space of the gallery, hang and sit this month some of the most radical experimentations on the relations between space, geometries and the body, with photographs, videos and installations documenting these researches. Observer met with the dealer on an afternoon in late September, right after the craziness of Armory Week, to learn more about the current show and the close relations with the artists involved that inspired this exhibition.
The temperature outside is cooling, but in the galleries of New York City, it’s heating up with a crop of exciting and timely gallery shows. All across Manhattan, as visitors flock to the slew of art fairs that open this Armory week, commercial galleries are presenting solo and group shows that both harken back to history-making artists of the past, and present up-and-coming artists charting a new course. From super-sized sculptures to a resurgence of fiber art, plus mind-bending paintings and videos, here’s our pick of what to see around town.
Political upheaval, economic headwinds, and all-around conflict are all phenomena that mark not only our fraught current moment but also that of the 1960s and ‘70s, when the artists in this show—stanley brouwn, Barry Le Va, Bruce Nauman, Dorothea Rockburne, and Richard Serra—hit their stride. Whether it was Serra throwing lead, Le Va smashing panes of glass, Nauman pacing his studio on film, or Rockburne creating delicate drawings that combined ideas from dance and the processes of nature, these practitioners pushed art beyond its boundaries, often asking the viewer to reconstruct the path the artist traveled to create the final work. In this timely group presentation, the works take on new meaning as they are viewed through the (fractured) lens of contemporary society.
David Nolan is located at 24 East 81st Street, New York, NY
Amid the backdrop of the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights movement, social change and art became inextricably intertwined in a movement fueled by a handful of artists that will be the subject of a new exhibition opening this September at David Nolan Gallery. “Radical Artists of the 1960s/1970s: Between Geometry and Gesture” will include works by some pioneering and thought-provoking artists who were active during that era, including stanley brouwn (b. 1935, Suriname), Barry Le Va (b. 1941, Long Beach, CA), Bruce Nauman (b. 1941, Fort Wayne, IN), Richard Serra (b. 1938, San Francisco) and Dorothea Rockburne (b. 1932, Montreal). With their art, those artists reacted, confronted and responded to the uneasy atmosphere of that time, between the political unrest, economic uncertainty, racial tension and anti-war demonstrations. They often pushed the boundaries, bearing witness to this feeling of precarity, and embraced more impermanent actions or intersected their artistic practices with politics and activism to unveil dynamics of power and control within the new mediated history reported by mass media. Capturing the feeling of a historical moment, the exhibition feels quite timely in unveiling alarming parallels with current global conditions.