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RICHARD SERRA

Prop Sculptures 1967 - 1987

RICHARD SERRA Malmo Roll,  1984

RICHARD SERRA
Malmo Roll, 1984
Steel
Plate: 51 x 51 x 1 3/4 inches (130 x 130 x 4 cm)
Roll: 23 3/4 x 5 7/8 inches (60 x 15 cm)
Installed: 56 x 24 x 68 inches (142 x 60 x 173 cm)

RICHARD SERRA Prop Sculptures 1967 - 1987, Van de Weghe Fine Art

RICHARD SERRA Prop Sculptures 1967 - 1987, Van de Weghe Fine Art
February 22 - May 26, 2002, Installation view

RICHARD SERRA Where I've Always Come From, 1969/1981

RICHARD SERRA
Where I've Always Come From, 1969/1981
Steel
Block: 12 x 12 x 6 inches (31 x 31 x 15 cm)
Bar: 102 x 4 3/4 inches (259 x 12 cm)
Installed: 16 x 102 x 15 3/4 inches (41 x 259 x 40 cm)

RICHARD SERRA Touch, 1987

RICHARD SERRA
Touch, 1987
2 hot-rolled steel plates
Each, 60 1/4 x 18 1/8 x 6 inches (153 x 46 x 15.5 cm)
Installed: 114 5/8 x 73 5/8 x 13 1/2 inches (291 x 187 x 34.5 cm)

RICHARD SERRA Malmo Roll,  1984

RICHARD SERRA
Malmo Roll, 1984
Steel
Plate: 51 x 51 x 1 3/4 inches (130 x 130 x 4 cm)
Roll: 23 3/4 x 5 7/8 inches (60 x 15 cm)
Installed: 56 x 24 x 68 inches (142 x 60 x 173 cm)

RICHARD SERRA Thinking of Sesshu, 1987

RICHARD SERRA
Thinking of Sesshu, 1987
2 hot-rolled steel plates
Each: 54 x 54 x 2 inches (137 x 137 x 5 cm)
Installed: 105 3/4 x 115 1/8 x 12 inches (169 x 292 x 31 cm)

RICHARD SERRA Sign Board Prop, 1969

RICHARD SERRA
Sign Board Prop, 1969
Antinomy lead
Plate: 39 1/2 x 79 x 1 inches (100 x 201 x 2.5 cm)
Roll: 40 1/2 x 3 3/4 inches (103 x 9.5 cm)
Installed: 39 x 79 x 26 inches (99 x 201 x 66 cm)

Press Release

"The perception of the work in its state of suspended animation, arrested motion, does not give one measurable truth, but a sense of presence, an isolated time. The apparent potential for disorder, for movement, endows the structure with a quality outside of its physical or relational definition."

– Richard Serra (MoCA, Los Angeles, 1998)

Van de Weghe Fine Art is pleased to announce an historical exhibition of important works by Richard Serra. The exhibition will focus on Serra’s “Prop” sculptures, which the artist first began to explore in 1968-69. The exhibition will include some of these earliest “Props”, as well as works dating through 1987.

While site and situation are important for all of Serra’s work, this is particularly true for the “Props.” These sculptures are formed as metal plates, blocks, bars and rolls, of lead or steel, and are subjected to the laws of physics – gravity, weight, balance and counterbalance. The emphasis is on the action of the making and remaking of the sculpture by the place and placement of its component forms, as each sculpture is formed by the enduring physical relationship of each of its parts to one another, in a perpetual state of process.