minimalism: Minimalism in the Visual Arts
Minimalism in the Visual Arts
Reacting against the formal excesses and raw emotionalism of abstract expressionism, the practitioners of minimal art (also sometimes called ABC art) strove to focus attention on the object as an object, reducing its historical and expressive content to the bare minimum. Many minimalist artists were sculptors concerned with reducing form to its utmost simplicity. They used flat surface colors, factory finishes, and industrial materials. The use of serial repetitions contributed to their goal. Carl Andre regarded the Italian artist Enrico Castellani (1930–2017) as the father of minimalism for his monochromatic paintings, begun in the late 1950s, on canvases topographically altered by underlying rows of items. Perhaps the earliest uses of the term “minimalism” regarding art was in the essay
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Minimalism in Music
- Minimalism in the Visual Arts
- Bibliography
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