Sol LeWitt is probably most famous for wall drawings. They are an extension of work he had done in sculpture and on paper, in which a simple rule specifies permutations and variations of elements. With wall drawings, the rule is given for marks to be made on a wall. We should distinguish these algorithmic works from impossible-to-implement instruction works and works realized by following preparatory sketches. Taking the core feature of a wall drawing to be that it is algorithmic, some of LeWitt's later works are wall drawings in name only
For Play Van Abbe, an exhibition program that invited artists to question the function of the museum...
Robin Evans describes the way in which architecture always exceeds its representations for every arc...
An artist talks about his work and his personal approach to drawing. A selection of sketches accompa...
Sol LeWitt is probably most famous for wall drawings. They are an extension of work he had done in s...
Rye Dag Holmboe examines previously undocumented wall drawings produced by Sol LeWitt in the Torre B...
This brief article examines "Ripples," a 2005 wall drawing by European-American artist Sol Lewitt on...
Sol Lewitt : mural drawing or the work as passage. The analysis of Four colors and all their combin...
In April 1972, one year before his accidental death, Robert Smithson cautioned: “The artist isn’t in...
Nemiroff discusses and historically situates LeWitt's language-based wall drawings. 2 bibl. ref
3.11 is an intermedia artwork that revisits Sol Le- Witt’s “Variations of incomplete open cubes”. 3...
Long and affiliate of Minimal Art, Sol LeWitt is certainly the first artist ever to have qualified h...
As this lavishly illustrated volume demonstrates, when a great artist turns his or her attention to ...
“The ideal page” is an essay about Sol Le Witt’s Wall Drawing # 1126 Whirls and Twirls 1 (2004), whi...
In mass communication, city walls have always played an important role in being carriers of visual m...
This series of 6 drawings address the questions ‘what is a drawing?’; ‘how can drawings be made coll...
For Play Van Abbe, an exhibition program that invited artists to question the function of the museum...
Robin Evans describes the way in which architecture always exceeds its representations for every arc...
An artist talks about his work and his personal approach to drawing. A selection of sketches accompa...
Sol LeWitt is probably most famous for wall drawings. They are an extension of work he had done in s...
Rye Dag Holmboe examines previously undocumented wall drawings produced by Sol LeWitt in the Torre B...
This brief article examines "Ripples," a 2005 wall drawing by European-American artist Sol Lewitt on...
Sol Lewitt : mural drawing or the work as passage. The analysis of Four colors and all their combin...
In April 1972, one year before his accidental death, Robert Smithson cautioned: “The artist isn’t in...
Nemiroff discusses and historically situates LeWitt's language-based wall drawings. 2 bibl. ref
3.11 is an intermedia artwork that revisits Sol Le- Witt’s “Variations of incomplete open cubes”. 3...
Long and affiliate of Minimal Art, Sol LeWitt is certainly the first artist ever to have qualified h...
As this lavishly illustrated volume demonstrates, when a great artist turns his or her attention to ...
“The ideal page” is an essay about Sol Le Witt’s Wall Drawing # 1126 Whirls and Twirls 1 (2004), whi...
In mass communication, city walls have always played an important role in being carriers of visual m...
This series of 6 drawings address the questions ‘what is a drawing?’; ‘how can drawings be made coll...
For Play Van Abbe, an exhibition program that invited artists to question the function of the museum...
Robin Evans describes the way in which architecture always exceeds its representations for every arc...
An artist talks about his work and his personal approach to drawing. A selection of sketches accompa...