Full Description
Minimal Conditions explores the expansion of sculpture into phenomenal and perception-based practices in and around the Los Angeles area in the 1970s, a time when California Light and Space art played a key role in the evolution of minimal art toward dematerialization. Focusing on the contingent and embodied nature of work by such artists as Robert Irwin, James Turrell, Doug Wheeler, Larry Bell, Eric Orr, and Maria Nordman, author Dawna L. Schuld proposes a method of analysis that considers these pieces not as discrete objects, but as diverse species of experience. Schuld's compelling study identifies perceptual, philosophical, and historical common ground shared by minimal artists working on both coasts and in the desert landscape.
Contents
List of Figures and Plates • ix
Preface: Situating Ourselves • xi
Acknowledgments • xv
Introduction • 1
1. Robert Irwin and the Presence of the Situation: From Post-Painterly to Post-Object • 16
2. In a Fog: Light, Space, Obfuscation, and Emergence • 37
3. Cave Dwelling: Resolution and Dissolution • 55
4. Being Nowhere: Desert Situations • 75
Conclusion • 103
Notes • 107
Bibliography • 127
Index • 137



