Rye Dag Holmboe examines previously undocumented wall drawings produced by Sol LeWitt in the Torre Bonomo in Spoleto in 1976. Using a psychoanalytic framework derived in part from the writings of Adrian Stokes, Holmboe argues for the existence of an “architectural unconscious” in LeWitt's practice and for the crucial importance of architecture to our understanding of Conceptual art more broadly. The essay further explores the choreographic dimensions of LeWitt's work and its autobiographical impulse
I will not deny the quandary I find myself in when attempting to speculate on the nature of objects...
The work in this exhibition investigates the unique potential for drawing to articulate the ideas an...
This article discusses place, memory and drawing. It suggests that ‘place’ can be a key theme for il...
Sol LeWitt is probably most famous for wall drawings. They are an extension of work he had done in s...
For Play Van Abbe, an exhibition program that invited artists to question the function of the museum...
This brief article examines "Ripples," a 2005 wall drawing by European-American artist Sol Lewitt on...
An essay on the work of Simon Lewty (b.1941) for a retrospective of his work held at Leamington Spa ...
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...
Long and affiliate of Minimal Art, Sol LeWitt is certainly the first artist ever to have qualified h...
“The ideal page” is an essay about Sol Le Witt’s Wall Drawing # 1126 Whirls and Twirls 1 (2004), whi...
This article makes an original contribution to the histories of sculpture in Britain, a phenomenon t...
Para-architecture as a method of design exploits the creative potential within interdisciplinary pra...
This article presents part of the process leading to the large-scale three-dimensional drawing entit...
How we look at architectural drawings is an inherently complicated topic. The issue arises from what...
I will not deny the quandary I find myself in when attempting to speculate on the nature of objects...
The work in this exhibition investigates the unique potential for drawing to articulate the ideas an...
This article discusses place, memory and drawing. It suggests that ‘place’ can be a key theme for il...
Sol LeWitt is probably most famous for wall drawings. They are an extension of work he had done in s...
For Play Van Abbe, an exhibition program that invited artists to question the function of the museum...
This brief article examines "Ripples," a 2005 wall drawing by European-American artist Sol Lewitt on...
An essay on the work of Simon Lewty (b.1941) for a retrospective of his work held at Leamington Spa ...
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...
Long and affiliate of Minimal Art, Sol LeWitt is certainly the first artist ever to have qualified h...
“The ideal page” is an essay about Sol Le Witt’s Wall Drawing # 1126 Whirls and Twirls 1 (2004), whi...
This article makes an original contribution to the histories of sculpture in Britain, a phenomenon t...
Para-architecture as a method of design exploits the creative potential within interdisciplinary pra...
This article presents part of the process leading to the large-scale three-dimensional drawing entit...
How we look at architectural drawings is an inherently complicated topic. The issue arises from what...
I will not deny the quandary I find myself in when attempting to speculate on the nature of objects...
The work in this exhibition investigates the unique potential for drawing to articulate the ideas an...
This article discusses place, memory and drawing. It suggests that ‘place’ can be a key theme for il...