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Sol LeWitt

About the Artist

Sol LeWitt earned a place in the history of art for his leading role in the Conceptual movement. His belief in the artist as a generator of ideas was instrumental in the transition from the modern to the postmodern era. Conceptual art, expounded by LeWitt as an intellectual, pragmatic act, added a new dimension to the artist's role that was distinctly separate from the romantic nature of Abstract Expressionism.

 

LeWitt believed the idea itself could be the work of art, and maintained that, like an architect who creates a blueprint for a building and then turns the project over to a construction crew, an artist should be able to conceive of a work and then either delegate its actual production to others or perhaps even never make it at all. LeWitt's work ranged from sculpture, painting, and drawing to almost exclusively conceptual pieces that existed only as ideas or elements of the artistic process itself.

 

Works in our Collection

Sol LeWitt 

Structure #5

1986

Wood painted white

29.5 x 29.5 x 86.5cm

Sol LeWitt 

Irregular Vertical Brushstrokes with Colours Superimposed

1993

Gouche on paper

55.9 x 76.2cm

SOLD

Sol LeWitt 

Horizontal Brushstrokes

1994

Gouche on paper

55.9 x 76.2cm

SOLD

Sol LeWitt 

Wavy Brushstrokes

1996

Gouche on paper

76.2 x 55.9cm

SOLD

Sol LeWitt 

Squiggly Brushstrokes

1997

Gouche on paper

76.2 x 57.2cm

SOLD

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