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Coventina

(27,120 posts)
Wed Mar 27, 2024, 05:28 PM Mar 27

Richard Serra, sculptor who made huge metal walls into 'poetic' art, dies at 85 [View all]

Richard Serra, a giant of US art whose monumental steel sculptures have appeared around the world over the past 50 years, has died at the age of 85.

Nicknamed the "poet of iron", Serra is credited with reinventing sculpture by placing simple but huge arrangements of upright slabs and shapes in the ground.

People can walk around and between his looming and leaning metal sheets, often on a street or in the landscape.

His rusting works are in cities including London, Berlin and New York.

For visitors, walking inside his sculptures could evoke a range of sensations, from inner peace to physical oppression.

"They sometimes induce vertigo. But they're also remarkably liberating," Washington Post art critic Sebastian Smee wrote.

"You can come out of them with feelings of secret and victorious expansion, as if you were Theseus after slaying the Minotaur."

Serra was born in San Francisco, where he would see the giant steel shapes of the hulls at the shipyard where his father worked.

Serra himself worked in a steel mill to help pay for his education, studying fine art at Yale, but he originally set out to be a painter.

He switched to sculpture when he realised that it was more interesting to have the viewer as part of the artwork itself.

Becoming part of the underground New York art scene in the 1960s, he and artistic friends like composers Philip Glass and Steve Reich funded their work by forming a removals company - Low Rate Movers - and shifting furniture part-time.

Serra's artistic reputation grew, as did the scale of his creations. However, that came with tragedy and controversy.

In 1971, a worker who was installing a Serra sculpture in Minneapolis was fatally crushed when a two-tonne steel plate fell on him. In 1988, a labourer lost a leg when an artwork collapsed as they were dismantling it in New York.

https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-68675588

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RIP.
I always love covering his work in my classes. It always generates interesting discussions about the nature of art.

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