Object Lessons : Case Studies in Minimal Art, The Guggenheim Panza Collection Initiative
  • reference book
  • paper over boards issued without dust-jacket
  • offset-printed
  • sewn bound
  • black-and-white & color
  • 27.4 x 20.7 cm.
  • 327 pp.
  • edition size unknown
  • unsigned and unnumbered
  • ISBN 9780892075560

Object Lessons : Case Studies in Minimal Art, The Guggenheim Panza Collection Initiative

Giuseppe Panza, Giovanna Panza, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Morris, Lawrence Weiner, Francesca Esmay, Ted Mann, Jeffrey Weiss, Martha Buskirk, Virginia Rutledge, James Ballard, Robert Skolnik, Steve Morse, Nancy Spector, Lena Stringari

Object Lessons : Case Studies in Minimal Art, The Guggenheim Panza Collection Initiative

description

Published as the results of a long term research project by the Guggenheim Museum''s Panza Collection Initiative (PCI) focused on the research and scholarship of the work of Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Morris and Lawrence Weiner held in Giuseppe and Giovanna Panza di Buomo''s collection of minimalist artwork which was donated to the Guggenheim in 1990-92. Organized and with texts by Francesca Esmay, Ted Mann, Jeffrey Weiss. Additional texts by Martha Buskirk and Virginia Rutledge. Includes PCI correspondence and interviews with and about Robert Morris, Donald Judd, Lawrence Weiner and Dan Flavin including interviews with some of Flavin''s assistants and fabricators including James Ballard, Robert Skolnik, and Steve Morse. Also includes a checklist, sources, and index.

"With its acquisition of the Panza Collection in 1990–92, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum assumed one of the premier holdings of art of the 1960s and ''70s, comprising more than 350 examples of Minimal, Post-Minimal, and Conceptual art assembled by the visionary Italian collectors Giovanna and Giuseppe Panza di Biumo. Object Lessons represents a ten-year effort by the Guggenheim to explore questions surrounding the identity and stewardship of these remarkable works through the Panza Collection Initiative, a multidisciplinary study project devoted to researching their technical and aesthetic history.

The volume centers on three works by key figures of Minimal art—Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Morris—and a fourth by the Conceptual artist Lawrence Weiner, which were selected from among over 140 works investigated over the course of the initiative. Authors Francesca Esmay, Ted Mann, and Jeffrey Weiss present each example in exhaustive detail and from several vantages, combining art history and conservation. Together they explore how a previously unaddressed history of production, ownership, and display has deeply influenced the life and legacy of the radical works of the period.

A concluding chapter, with contributions by art historian Martha Buskirk and art historian and attorney Virginia Rutledge, examines the topic of decommission, a new category of collection classification devised by the Guggenheim for works that are contested or compromised and, therefore, no longer viable for display. Copiously illustrated with photographs of the works, the exhibitions in which they appeared, and related drawings and proposals, the volume also includes extensive excerpts of new interviews with artists and fabricators, key historical documents, and previously unpublished correspondence." -- publisher''s statement.

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